Looking to Begin Your Future Today? Today’s employers are looking for applicants with real-world work experience. Don’t get left behind! UCS currently has many part-time opportunities for individuals with all types of majors and backgrounds that can offer you the experience you need to succeed in the real world! Part-Time Opportunities: ♦ Customer Service ♦ Clerical/Office Support ♦ Hardware Repair and Support ♦ PC Support/LAN Administration ♦ Inventory Control Get your career started now with a proven leader! To apply, give us a call at 595-2609. EOE. UCS...A Tradition in Quality, A Commitment to Aggieland! www.universalcomputersys.com Page 6 • Tuesday, September 28. 1999 s TATE Commission to Texas higher educati DALLAS (AP) — Texas boasts 140 public and private colleges and universities, but only one in five Texans holds a bachelor’s or grad uate degree. Lt. Gov. Rick Perry hopes to im prove those numbers through the Special Commission on 21st Cen tury Colleges and Universities. Perry yesterday announced for mation of the 15-member panel, which will examine workforce needs and demographic changes and search for ways to prepare col leges and universities. “1 don't think there's been the type of focus on higher education that it deserves,” P^erry said during a news conference at El Centro Col lege in downtown Dallas. “We have a good system. We have great universities. It can be better.” The group, composed of Texas Railroad Commissioner Tony Garza, four state senators and 10 private citizens, will hold hearings throughout the state starting next month and issue a report to the Legislature by Nov. 1,2000. “We have a good system. We have great universities. It can be better.^ — Rick Perry Texas lieutenant governor In the past 30 years, only two studies of higher education have taken place in Texas, Perry said. During the last study, in 1987, the timing was bad because the state’s economy was weak, he said. "1 think we have a window of opportunity in this sel said. “1 don’t knowwhe dow closes. I don’t squander that.” Task force member x| West called the com goals “visionary.” “I can think of nogre:| for the state of Texas tk at its institutions ofhigti ing,” West, D-Dallas,$^ on the panel are Carlosl Corpus Christi; SenateL Commission Chair Teel! Amarillo and Senate Commission Chair Bill! Mount Pleasant. During the 76th Leg session, which endedi lawmakers created a Sift scholarship program toh Texans attend college. They also set asiden billion for higher educa the next two years. Bush defends service recoi AUSTIN (AP) — The former speaker of the Texas House of Representatives said yesterday that he called the head of the Texas Air National Guard in 1968 to rec ommend Republican presidential front runner George W. Bush for a pilot slot during the Vietnam War. But Ben Barnes, who later was lieutenant gover nor, said the request for his help came from a Bush family friend — not Bush or his father, who then was a congressman. The Texas governor, meanwhile, insisted again that neither he nor his father sought such assistance when he joined the Guard. “I can tell you what happened — nothing hap pened,” Bush said at a campaign appearance south of Houston. “My Guard unit was looking for pilots, and I flew for the Guard. “I’m proud of my service, and any allegation that my dad asked for special favors is simply not true. I didn’t ask anybody to help get me to the Guard, either.” Barnes has been at the center of questions about Bush’s Vietnam-era service for several weeks. His name surfaced in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Dallas by the former executive directorolLl | Lottery. Lawrence Littwin has sued GTECHCa lottery operator, alleging that the company is mj for his firing in 1997, after four monthsom “I'm proud of my service, and any allegation that my dad asked for special favors is simply not true." - TEXAS GOV. GEORGE W. BUSH > <'i ting t ttv\in'sfawyerswj ed to question Barnes, who used to |]# , /brGTEl about whether GTECH was allowedfltepits/ui tive state contract In exchange fdn®KT/7et| about the Guard matter. That theory has been dismissed as GTECH, Barnes and Bush. V/th her . Mark Your Calendar Now for the October 7 Academic Convocation ************** n! Inbs ****»»w»«*«^**' All members of the Texas A&M family—students, faculty, staff and friends of the University—are encouraged to attend this special celebration of academic excellence at 3 p.m., Thursday, October 7, in Rudder Theater, with a reception immediately following in Rudder Exhibit Hall. This year's convocation is dedicated to honoring faculty members who have received recognition through the university. A special address will be delivered by Peter Magrath, president of the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. October Plan to Attend! October 7 3 p.m. Rudder Theater A Night in Rocketown The Acoustic Tour Featuring Watermark, Chris Rice, Ginny Owens, and Cindy Morgan October 14, 1999 8:00 p.m. Rudder Auditorium TICKETS ON SALE TODAY! jtfSC Box Office 845-1234 $10 General Admission Sponsored by Compass College Ministries ◄ i P a Pf 1-8 p 11.50 Mon rues Wed [Him fridi Sati :$un