PROFESSIONAL NAIL SALON AT THE MALL We do all kinds of artificial nails. Friendly, Clean, good atmosphere. Experienced nail technicians. Come to see us and SAVE for your nail care. You will.have a SUBSTANTIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT. 693-0996 LeNails Post Oak Mall Across form Luby’s cMofze. Ptieattatuuf (ZesttetidL. # 9 * OF BRAZOS VALLEY STILL HURTING FROM A PAST ABORTION? ♦ Grief Counseling ♦ Help for Symptoms of Abortion Trauma ♦ 10-week Recovery Program ♦ Emotional & Spiritual Support ♦ Free & Confidential Call and ask for the PACE (Post Abortion Counseling & Education) Director. 846-1097 3620 E. 29TH ST • BRYAN www.rtls.com/hope Texas A&M Hillel Services for Yom Kippur Sunday, Sept. 19, 1999 Kol Nidre Services at 8:00 p.m. Monday., Sept. 20, 1999 Yom Kippur Services start at 10:00 a.m. Yizcor about 5:30 p.m. Break-the-Fast after sundown at the conclusion of the Neilah and Havdalah. All holiday events are free of charge and occur at Hillel, located across from campus at 800 George Bush, CS Please contact Hillel for more information at telephone # 696-7313 or e-mail us at: Names for Yizcor must be received in the office by Sept. 18, 1999 Gender Issues Lunches with the Faculty and Administration Would you like to express your opinions/perceptions of gender issues on campus? Are you interested in discussing your ideas and opinions with faculty, staff, and administrators to help bring about any needed changes? Based on your interest, lunches will be scheduled throughout the semester to discuss these important issues. From those who respond, individuals will be randomly chosen to attend the lunches. Our goal is to create an atmosphere where students, faculty, staff, and administrators can openly discuss both problems and triumphs of gender issues on this campus. If interested, please contact us at wweek00@ provost.tamu.edu Casa Ole *■ Grapevine * Casa Old ‘ Grapevine 4 Casa Ole * Grapevine Department of Student Activities ses Center Volun c ’- Volunteer Opportunities Fair September 22-23 (Wednesday and Thursday) 10am-2pm at the Bonfire Field near Age Habitat’s On-Campus house! • f r \ GivEm, Aggies Volunteer CJervices Center >fOto 6 MORE DAYS! Department ofV-/!udent Activities serve@tamu.edu lot Virtual Volunteer Services Center!! http://wsc.tamu.edu/ Luri Salter lori-s@tamu.edu 845.1133 168Koldus Sharis Smith sharis@stuact.tamu.edu 862.1491 158Koldus in’ Casa Ole * Grapevine * Casa Old * Grapevine * Casa Ole * Grapevine Page 8 •Thursday, September 16, 1999 s TATE Tie Battalion University of Texas reopens towi Visitors allowed on landmark’s observation deck after 25 yet AUSTIN (AP) — University of Texas President Larry Faulkner surveyed the panoramic view from the observation deck of the UT Tower yesterday, confident the school could leave behind the build ing’s legacy of violence and suicide. “You don’t wipe out the past, but you don’t stop with the past,” Faulkner said as school of ficials officially opened the deck to visitors af ter 25 years. The school closed the deck on the 27th floor in 1974 after a series of suicides and a 1966 sniper attack that left 16 dead and 31 wounded. “I believe it is important that we move be yond these painful chapters of the building’s history,” Faulkner said. Scanning the red-tile roofs of campus to ward downtown Austin, Faulkner could see students milling about on the mall below where troubled ex-Marine Charles Whitman found many of his victims. “I think it’s time for this important symbol to be experienced by people who connect to it so strongly and who haven’t had that oppor tunity,” Faulkner said. The clock tower was forever linked with Whitman on Aug. 1, 1966, when he lugged a ri fle and a footlocker full of ammunition to the observation deck and started shooting. The bloody rampage ended 92 minutes later when he was shot to death by police officers Ramiro Martinez and Houston McCoy. '7 think its time for this important symbol to be experienced by people who connect to it so strongly/' — Larry Faulkner University of Texas president “I feel like Whitman was holding the tower hostage,” Martinez, who favors reopening the observation deck, said. “It’s time we took the tower back.” Nine other deaths are associated with the tower, including two accidental falls and seven suicides, five from the observation deck. The universiiv fiiullv .igreed last yean open the deck using a plan generatedbj dents. The deck is now covered with a ffi f steel lattice to thwart jumpers. Visitorsak go through a metal detector and security^ will be posted at the check-in point andc observation deck, Faulkner said. Visitors will be limited to groups: more than 24 at once and will be prohij from carrying packages onto the deck, will begin today and run daily until tltej of October before being scaled backtc ends only. "1 think we’re taking substantial precat; and a large part of the security was tokeefj pie from placing themselves in dangeroti:j ations,” Faulkner said. Last month, the university 1 memorial garden on the north side of the er to honor Whitman's victims. | Most reaction to reopening the obsera| deck has been positive, Faulkner said. “I’m glad they’re doing it," Robert Heai former Associated Press reporter who wail by Whitman while covering the story,saidj a magnificent view from up there.” Haze threatens Big Bend Document BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK (AP) — For years, Nancy Sykes’ outdoorsy husband had been try ing to drag her to Big Bend, which he described as “the most beauti ful place on Earth.” But once she finally got here, what she saw — or did not see — sent her packing two days early. Unlike when James Sykes first visited this remote, south west Texas treasure in 1975, to day white haze hangs over the park, obscuring if not complete ly blocking scenic landscapes in the distance. “Isn’t it awful?” said Mrs. Sykes, 44, who drove about 10 hours with her husband from their hometown of League City, near Houston. “Every time I look at it, it makes me angry.” “It’s really disappointing,” adds Sykes, 51, “if you know what the view was before the haze.” The Sykeses are hardly the first to complain about the smog, which began creeping into the 800,000-acre park more than 20 years ago. Big Bend, one of the most popular Texas destinations for outdoor enthusiasts with its rugged mountains and raft trips along the Rio Grande, is now con sidered one of the most polluted national parks in the West. The once-pristine site — 300 miles from El Paso, the nearest major city and so remote that not a single FM radio station comes in clearly — today is as smoggy as some urban areas. The concerns of park visitors and area residents prompted a 1996 preliminary study, which found that power plants in both Texas and Mexico were con tributing to the milky haze. Be fore the study was commis sioned, U.S. officials long held that twin coal-burning power plants 125 miles southeast in Mexico were the principal cause of the pollution. Now, the Environmental Pro tection Agency and the National Park Service have undertaken a more extensive, $6.3 million study to determine exactly what is in the air and how it got here. Officials hope to use the information even tually to limit the pollution drift ing into the park. “If we know for sure Texas is a major contributor, we could go to those sources and implement tech nology to reduce the amount of pol lutants, ” Vidal Davila Jr., the park’s acting superintendent, said. confiscate! from schot Rangers seize recor&i financial investigate Panel: English-only tests unfair WASHINGTON (AP) — English- only tests that determine whether a student moves ahead or graduates may violate millions of Hispanic children’s rights, a presidential pan el said yesterday. It urged the Edu cation Department to investigate. “State education leaders have compromised the future of Hispan ic students by making high-stakes decisions based on inaccurate and inadequate information,” the report by the President’s Advisory Com mission on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Americans said. The Education Department does investigate such cases, Rodger Mur- phey, a spokesperson for the civil- rights branch said.. About 20 percent of the 5,000 cases filed each year specifically relate to laws that pro hibit racial discrimination against students, he said. A 1974 Supreme Court ruling re quires schools to provide help for students with limited English. However, opponents of bilingual education argue that accommodat ing children on high-stakes tests will hurt them in the long run. “You want to make sure kids don’t graduate with a degree that they can’t even read,” Jorge Am- selle, the vice president for edu cation of the Center for Equal Op portunity, a Washington group that opposes bilingual education and affirmative action, said. “The purpose of education in the United States is to prepare stu dents to survive and succeed in this society and that requires mastery in English. “To say that a student should be able to do math and science and read and write in English is simply a matter of accountability, not a matter of discrimination.” WACO (AP) — The If Rangers have seized several) es of financial docunofnisfe Emma L. Harrison Qi| School as part of a finandal-B management investigation. The seizure warrant infWs documents stored in Waco Community Center^ Heart of Texas Black Cta^ Commerce, all houspfl^f same property, RangeHs®! The leading Nix said. for the ston The State Board of Ectol last week decided to revest community center’s contra operate the school after anr found severe financial mist agement and violations ofse al state and federal laws. The audit also insinii; funds raised by the chair through bingo were mingled other funds. The five-hour roundup formed on Tuesday aftern also involved investigators the McLennan County Di Attorney’s Office and audi from the State Auditor’s Of and the Texas Lottery Conn sion’s charitable bingo divis Nix said. “They took 15 boxes, an mean full boxes, of documei tion,” she said. BRIDAL CO. OUTLETS OWN A TUXEDO 129. INCLUDES TUX COAT, TROUSERS, SHIRT BOW TIE, SASH & CUFFLINKS WITH WITH STUDS OR SHOES CLEARANCE OF RENTAL INV. - WHILE SUPPLIES LAST - OTHER ITEMS SOLD SEPERATELY 107 WALTON DRIVE • WALTON & TEXAS AVE. • 764-8289 OPEN 10:30 TO 6:30 TUES-FRI, SAT 10:30 TO 5:30 Care Plus Dental Center Dan Lawson, D.D.S. Neal Kruger, D.D.S. Lance Coleman, D.D.S. 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