NEWS Fuej lay, February Page 10 THE BATTALION I ucsUuy, f ebnan Smooth- move! Israel halts peace talks with Syria after soldiers’ deat W1 The Cynosure") laser in our office uses a special process called TK$™ to disable hair follicles and impair further hair growth. Come and see how civilized (and effective) hair removal has become. And uncover your natural radiance. Uncover your natural radiance. J JAMES N. CHILDS, M.D. ‘79 MARIA V. CHILDS, M.D. BOARD CERTIFIED DERMATOLOGISTS BY APPOINTMENT: 696-4444 1605 ROCK PRARIE RD., SUITE 312 COLLEGE STATION JERUSALEM (AP) — Stung by the deaths of three Israeli soldiers in south Lebanon, Prime Min ister Ehud Barak said there would be no new peace talks with Syria until the Damascus government reins in the Islamic militant Hezbollah. “Israel will not be able to negotiate peace as long as the Syrians do not restrain Hezbollah from act ing against the Israeli army,” said a Defense Min istry statement issued hours after the bloody attack, which also wounded four Israeli soldiers, one criti cally. One of the dead was an Israeli major. Before and after Hezbollah’s strike in Israel’s self-declared security zone in south Lebanon, Israeli warplanes staged nine air raids against suspected guerrilla positions, the army said. The extent of ca sualties from the airstrikes was not immediately known. The violence, the worst in southern Lebanon in six months, comes as the United States has been seeking to bring Israel and Syria back to the bar gaining table. Negotiations resumed in December after a four-year hiatus, but broke down in a matter of weeks. Syria said it pulled out of the talks due to Israel’s refusal to commit in advance to a total withdrawal from the disputed Golan Heights, and over what kind of a demilitarized area would exist there. Following Monday’s attack — which came only a day after Hezbollah assassinated the man consid ered No. 2 in Israel’s allied militia, the South "We condemn the vio lence and urge re straint on all parties that have influence in the region” told lawmakers from his One Israel faction. With 30,000 troops in Lebanon. Syria is its neighbor’s main power broker. Israel has longed maintained that Syria has tacitly approved and in some cases, encouraged - the flow of arms to Hezbollah. In the Defense Ministrs statement, Barak used language that in the past has foreshadowed a major Israeli counterattack. "We have known in the past, and we still know, {how } to strike at the place and time of our choosing,’’’he said. Lebanon now at tour ahead) one-lhirdi f fa£> \ cur's lota! I iurak rc|x;atcd his campaign pic-* - -Ivi pull his troops out of Lebanon "as soon aspcss an order!) tashion a Missouri I lit, - and his ( ah met have urcucd thdt k wants tit u northern border could be more adequatfXjLstretch of I tended from the Israeli side, with less loss . bH^osa Parks, th 1 he ptime minister s mo\e marked a th^eoiis woman win she civil disobedie lumab In Him. the talks down item i, Barak has tn atemcnts aboi d to wc S\na’ ' I )amase.)hako of the Civil Preside! — David Leavy National Security Council spokesman Lebanon Army — Barak used his bluntest language yet to implicate Syria in Hezbollah’s actions. “It is ... the Syrians, not just Hezbollah, w ho are behind supply lines and freedom of movement” for the guerrillas, Barak, a former military chief of stair. Barak described the recent viole nee, including As sat the death of another Israeli soldier last week, as a 1 SI “grave intensification ... that Israel would not al- low to continue.” ing it In Washington, U.S. officials s; • ■ » j* j istrat tid they didn t read Barak’s statement as setting pn .•conditions for continuing talks, but rather as on a sscssment that j j Hezbollah’s attacks were a threat tc • peace ncgoti- tramc ations. Sund, "We condemn the violence and urge restraint .u . m on all parties that have influence t n the region.” south David Leavy, spokesman for the Ns itional Sccun- v,j ty Council, said. fate o With Israeli combat deaths in one month in it has He conquered death at the beginning of the first millennium. We think He knows something about life in the third. As you enter the third millennium, wouldn’t you like to hear more about the purpose and direction God can give your life? If you have any questions about Jesus and His relevance for your life, come by and ask one of us or visit our Tell Me More website at www.leaderu.com/TellMeMore. “I am the bread of life; he who comes to Me shall not hunger, and he who believes in Me shall not thirst.” (John 6:35) FACULTY FRIENDS John 3:16 states “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life." We are a group of professors, instructors, lecturers, and administrators united by their common experience that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students, faculty, and staff who might like to discuss such questions with us. For more information about the FACULTY FRIENDS ad, please contact Murphy Smith 5-3108, Steve Crouse 5-3997, or Lee Lowery 5-4395. The Faculty Friends website is http://facultyfriends.tamu.edu W. 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The ad does represent and acknowledge the diversity of academic contributions to Texas A&M University by men and women of various race, ethnic group, and cultural background who share the Christian faith. >c U.S. economy sets record with longest expansion WASHINGTON (AP) — reak out Republicans arc quick to ft* the chat npagne, cut the cak c an id strike current recovery actual!) up the b •and ■— it’s time to c ‘ClCr >raic the two years F>cforc Clinton loci U.S. ec< wtomy. when Republican George Be- On' fuesday, the curren t CX president. that beg :an in March 1991 I MXO Bush’s misfortune was that*' longest in American hist orv last recession only lasted oghts months, , heating the old tr lark of 106 from July 1990 until March !* months set dunng the 1960i coycty in the carh da\ ^ wasikr The eight years and 11 n loot hs since "jobless rccoscr) ’ because m the last recession is quite a feat consid- ccptionaJIv sluggish, aHovonsfr eringtht : average expansion belt >rc 1982 make the w cak economy a ke) a - did not last long enough to see its third issue in 1992. birthdaj i, let alone its ninth. Asked to apportion crcd “If y ou are not cheering 1 for this ;tc- government policy-makers for' complis ihment, then you h avc awfully times, pm ate economists gene no\ement. Ho hu lice But wait. It i laming of the higl cresting. It is the | King named that i ■n 1994, the Ki .tati highway dep DT) for permissio viol )()T, to their c illow them to refti hat t was illegal t X)SL J on the high naii itained by the vlau.” The signs \ Up hen. after can <.Kk failed to ma :o protest the Klan >oum Senator Will oorjers w ant to nai osa Parks. In the ieveit, “Bully for t ; The Klan. like its presence know into obscurity tern er it takes to stay i of the organi/atioi that the organ i/at ii tizibg is the name hate far and wide. FommateU lor Stat< T high standards,” said David W) ss, chief economist at Standard & Poor’s DRi. "This is an unprecedented economy." And it is not just length that makes the current period remarkable. By almost any measure, these are good economic times. Unemployment is at its lowest level in 30 years — 4.1 per cent — consumer confidence is at record highs and Wall Street has just wrapped up an unprecedented five straight years of returns of 20 percent or more in the S&P 500 stock list. Long past the time that most expan sions are showing their age, this one seems to be getting stronger, with 1999 marking the third straight year with growth at four percent or more. Normally, economic growth at those levels, combined with a dwindling sup ply of workers, would translate into rapidly rising wages, leading to higher inflation. But not this time. Last year, the so-called core rate of inflation, which takes out volatile energy and food prod ucts, was up just 1.9 percent, the best per formance in 34 years. President Clinton takes every oppor tunity to cite the soundness of the Clin- ton-Gore deficit reduction program as a key building block for the good econo my, hoping voters will reward Democ rats this fall. he perform; Texas publi as rated by t ity Counts 2000 E Week Survey reve Man (ircemp, acceptably low m< all the unsatisfactc @ Schulman Theatres College Park 6 praise to Ft . e ( hainnan .• central bank colleagues < ireenspan has .iln’.iJ)' fr-grades the Texas.h one soft landing raisinginte py 8 ^ 111 rs'ceftcd, t seven times in 1994 and early impiox ing teacln. slow things down and keep infto^y topped oil the dcr control And he is mm attr However, it is unji second soft landing. all the blame on if Since last June, the Fed hi- ■' na l' 11 1 'ties, rates three times and it is expwed; ^ exas P u ^' c st so .i.'.iin during its meetings Tucv i ea c'hers are given Wednesday sources with wine " Hie cci nonn is growing - ^fr students as w even the F ederal Reserve has- mg grossly underi able to slow it down and that Me ics of public schoc will be raising rates again.”saidR.f°rbetter teachers Yamarone o! Argus Researchfrclaries until the s! Economists, in fact, are look quires governmen as man) as three more rate incrcie T he 1'exas go\ fore summer, bringing the totalr.-Cial resources, ho of credit tightening moves to si them on educatio: one year. on education out Hie remarkable combination wealth in 1997, a> unemployment and low inflation Counts Survey. T cited In proponents of a "New Ldy the situation ii mj " theory for why the current;creases education sion has lasted so long. best achieve this, I hey believe the billions of ^reallocating curre invested in computers and other: tech products has boosted AmJ productivity, the amount of outp hour of work. That, combined with new con Bush’s hi tion from the global economy,has 1 ’ the lid on prices, many analystsyOV© trdt@4 www.schulman-theatres.com 2080 E. 29th St., Bryan 775-2463 BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 4:15 Today s Tlmaa Only AGGIE OWNED * OPERATED STUART LITTLE (PG) 4:35 7:25 9:35 THE GREEN MILE (H) m TALENTED MR. 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