m Suppliers of Soccer Equipment for the Brazos Valley. Back To School Shoe Sale! Shoes marked down 10-25% Receive 1 pair of socks at 1/2 price w/shoe purchase Store Hours Mon.-Fri. 2:00 pm - 8:00 pm Saturday 10:00 am - 6:00 pm Closed on Sunday 1405-B Harvey Road, College Station Across from the Post Oak Mall Entrance - Next to E-Z Mart Aggie Owned & Operated Let's T 11- cutline for the photo above this Registration: January 17-28 1-5 pm Conversational English Classes For student, staff, family Beg inning f inter mediate, advanced Small group lessons Classes begin January 31 707 Texas Ave Campus IS TT U D EE rsl XI A FOUND AXION 1 st General Meeting Come hear Texas Aggie Baseball Coach Mark Johnson and players talk about the upcoming season!! Monday, January 24 th @ 8:30 p.m. Koldus Room 110 sing the d Wide Web Research Texas A&M University General Libraries is offering a class to assist Texas A&M University students and faculty in effectively using the World Wide Web for research. This session uses Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer to search the World Wide Web. It surveys WWW search services, illustrates advanced search strategies, teaches how to store sites useful for your class work or research and provides criteria for evaluating and citing web information. Web access to library databases is demonstrated, with guide lines for choosing the appropriate databases for the subject or type of information needed. Prerequisite: This class meets for an hour and a half in a CIS Open Access Computing Lab. You must CLAIM A LABS ACCOUNT from the Block ATM screen or a CIS help desk (call 845-8300 for assistance) prior to the class in order to use a computer in an Open Access Computing Lab. Day Date Time Location Monday January 24 5:45-7:15 pm Student Computing Center, 114 Tuesday January 25 5:30 -7:00 pm West Campus Library, Rm. 126 Wednesday January 26 5:45-7:15 pm Student Computing Center, 114 Thursday January 27 5:30 -7:00 pm Student Computing Center, 114 Bring a formatted high density disk if you want to save information. There is no charge and no sign-up is necessary. All are welcome. NATION Page 10 THE BATTALION Monday, Jama-. Clinton asks for $27 million to ensure equal pay for equal work WASHINGTON (AP) — With the support of a women’s soccer star. Pres ident Clinton plans to ask Congress on Monday for $27 million to bolster fed eral laws requiring that employers pay men and women equal wages for equal work. “We want to make sure that the em ployers and employees all understand their rights and responsibil ities on equal pay,” White House Domestic Policy Adviser Bruce Reed said Sunday. Officials also want to beef up en forcement of equal pay laws. Women earn an average of 75 cents for every dollar men are paid, a disparity Clinton has pointed to in the past as evidence of social injustice. “When a woman is denied equal pay, it doesn’t just hurt her,” he said in a radio address last January. “It hurts her family, and that hurts America.’’Clinton was being joined at a White House event by Michelle Akers, who with her teammates has been boycotting train ing in a compensation dispute that erupted after the U.S. women’s World Cup championship last season. “Millions of women who are work ing for less than men don’t have the whole country pulling for them the way the World Cup team does,” Reed said. “But they should.” As part of his $27 million initiative to close the wage gap, Clinton will seek $10 million for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Those funds would train as many as 3,000 employ ers about equal pay laws and 1,000 EEOC staff inspectors. A similar, $14 million initiative failed in Congress last year. It would represent the first time since the EEOC took responsibility for “We want to make sure that the employers and employees all under stand their rights and responsibilities on equal pay. ,f — Bruce Reed White House Domestic Policy Adviser A portion of the Labor funding would be used to help employers im prove their pay polices and strengthen public-private partnerships. Additionally, Clinton vy as calling on Congress to pass the so-called Pay- check Fairness Act, sponsored by Sen ate Minority Leader Tom Daschle and Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., «hich would strengthen laws prohibiting wage discrimination. The Daschlc-DcLauro legisla tion, which failed in the last leg islative session, would direct fed eral agencies to c< wage dispantie: penalties for viol statutes. Akers and her raises from $3.15 d.: onshi paid I ccr ft enforcement of equal pay laws in 1998 that the agency had funding to train in spectors in the area. The EEOC also would produce public service an nouncements on the subject. The Labor Department would re ceive $17 million to help train women for jobs where they have been under represented, particularly in the high- technology sector, through the career centers the department supports and through apprenticeships. the United States gaming session is scheduled fc day in Los Angeles. Hank Steinbrecher. executiv tor of the U.S. Soccer Federati said that because most of the m with professional clubs, they ,i by the USSF only for short pen fore games and tournaments. T women do not have pro clubs < contracts and are together longc ing the USSF more to house, ft travel. Mo ind Reagan’s m skills declinin WASHINGTON (AP)- President Reagan’s rcen sa\ s her lather ( hercntlv and, because hisr arc tailing, no longer working simple jigsaw | Maureen Reagan sometimes ask the cc ther, who lues Al/heimer’sd "My response is, But u is hard to say thaLl makes it so easy for us,’ an essay m Newsweek I other words, it s still him.! tor skills are going. Mv Reagan she ahdhcrf gan doing the puzzles—I piece projects, then 1001 shortly after the diagnosisi five years ago that he had as brain disease. “Unfortunately, he can’t! anymore," Ms. Reagan sitt vs as great fun, and he had it dous sense of accomplidns completing them. It was the same with ■* He looked at it. enjoyed tkji and read the w ords out loud. ”He could recognize even after aphasia had robbed his ability to put his thoogil words,” she w rote Aphasaitl ot the ability to use or utde w ords. East month. Mrs. Reagan a television interview that Ret longer is capable ot havingi? sation that makes sense. Presidential candidates prepare for Iowa caucus DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Hitting every comer of this sprawling state. Republicans squabbled over abortion and taxes in a fight for their con servative base Saturday, as presidential candidates in both major parties braved nasty weather to rally supporters to Iowa’s caucuses. “Every vote matters!” said GOP front-runner George W. Bush, who attempted to bur nish his anti-abortion creden tials for a third consecutive day. The Texas governor pledged to keep the abortion plank in a staunchly conserva tive GOP platform. On Monday night, about 10 percent of the state’s 1.8 mil lion registered voters are ex pected to gather in living rooms, schools, church base ments and fire stations to an nounce their support of candi dates. Few convention delegates are at stake, but the real reward in Iowa and the Feb. 1 New' Hampshire primary is momen tum: Campaigns can take flight or lose altitude in the first two contests of the presidential year. “We’re going to make a good showing maybe and sur prise a lot of people,” said for mer New Jersey senator Bill Bradley, the sole rival to De mocrat A1 Gore. The vice president holds a wide lead over Bradley in Iowa polls and has broken out of a long-running tie in New Hampshire surveys. “I’m not quitting,” Bradley told supporters in Maquoketa. “We’re going forward. We have another day.” The vice president played an expectations game of his own design. “What are the expectations if Senator Bradley scored a vic tory? Expectations in the event that occurred would be that he would do exactly what he said he would do and take as his Forbes, one c >f five Republican lor many caucus-gcc model for leadership style ... candidates st umping the state. tend to be more cons' Ronald Reagan,” Gore said at made two fa Ise approaches to than voters as a ^ a Fort Dodge rally. the Mason ( rity runway and pulled up quick- mas be why the topics often at GOP cimpic Saturdav. ly each time as 7 am not quitting. We're going forward. We have another day." BILL BRADLEY DEM. CANDIDATE Bradley’s irregular heart beat, a minor condition that dominated his campaign for the better part of two days, did not come up in a question-and- answer session in Clinton. The weather was more of a problem. A wintry mix of wind and snow made Bradley’s motor cade ride through eastern Iowa a perilous one. The plane carrying Steve trouble in the murky weather. The plane landed on the third attempt. Forbes emerged safe but shaken. | ’ “The weath er couldn’t stop us, and the political establish ment is not going to stop us,” he said In one of the day’s more colorful events. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah gave a foreign policy address in a barroom full of reporters and set the lowest of expectations for a six-man field: “I’m going to have to do better than sixth here, it seems to me,” he said. Abortion is a major issue Bauer, who neeiis third place to bolsa- ging campaign. suggC“ “ Forbes is a recent conv.' anti-abortion movema “I’m not a Stevf lateft that believed so* three years ago and It something different s Bauer said. Turning his sights front-runner, the Was.* activist said. "Govero' is completely out of sit the party he wants tola Bush, like most Rqv voters, is opposed toat hut he does not stresst campaign trail. I Ic is looking aheao general election, whd sue tends to alienaif swing voters. QWomen’s Open House Q January 26, 2000 10 am - 2 pm MSC Flagroom Come and see what on-campus women’s organizations have to offer: information, ffee-bees and more!!! LlFlfM Sponsored b y : Gender Issues Education Services 845-1107 Attention May 2000 Graduates Thompson Professional Group, Inc., a multi-disciplined Engineer^ Architecture Firm located in Houston,Texas will be on campus conducting interviews on February 24, 2000. We are looking f« future leaders in the Civil Engineering Field specializing in: Transportation Structures Hydraulics & Hydrology Water Resources Interested candidates should sign-up for an interview between January 24-February 1, 2000. THOMPSON PROFESSIONAL GROUP, INC. — AN AGGIE TRADITION FOR SIXTEEN YEARS SPRING SESSION I DANCE LESSONS CLASS DAY TIME LOCATION C&WI JITTERBUG I JITTERBUG I C&WI C&W II ADV. JOTERBUG SUN SUN SUN SUN WED THUR 6:15-7:45 8:15-9:45 6- 7:30 8-9:30 7- 8:30 7-8:30 GRW 266 GRW 266 MSC 224 MSC 224 GRW 262 GRW 266 SIGN-UPS WILL BE IN THE MSC FLAGROOM TODAY AND TOMORROW 8 a.m.-3 p.m. CLASSES WILL START THE WEEK OF FEB. 6 AND WILL RUN FOR 4 WEEKS COST: $35 PER COUPLE $40 FOR ADVANCED JITTERBUG fmi: www.tamu.edu/aggie wranglers Alpha Phi Omega National Co-Ed Service Fraternity Interested in Leadership, Friendship, and Servici Come find out what we’re all about!!! m Informational Meetings: Tuesday, Jan. 25"’ 7:30 pm Harrington 105 Wednesday, Jan. 26" 8:30 pm Harrington 207 yfcoys Club i Girls Club ♦ Horse Project* Crestview • Kemp^ 111 I Camp Howdy | Hospice - Aggies Up All Night ,- !; SHack-a-tho4 • Special Olympics * Fun Run • Replant • Big Event - Parents Night0^ • Elder Aid • Tutoring • Aggie Buddies • Adopt A River • Blood • AAeals on Wheels • Howdy Project • Phoebes Home Any Questions? Call Jen 822-2480 or Melissa 694-2425