HAIR DESIGN 694-9755 Formal Up Do’s 118 Walton Dr. Across from Main Entrance to Texas A&M Better Scores, Better Schools Satisfaction guaranteed or well work with you again for free. May GMAT class begins this weekend! /Ti (fl The Princeton Review 979.696.9099 | 800.2Review | www.review.com fa ftftirtyi Kmw s roi ofttBUrf wih ftmtaoK (j^s, a ^ ' r S TonE THURSDAY MARCH 23 rd Live Music w/ Only Show this Semester!!! Doors open at 8pm $ 1 Longnecks *1 bar drinks 41110 p m - 696-5570 for details Party Safe and Designate a Driver Are you concerned about balancing your job and your personal life? Are you afraid (bat your career and social life may collide? Iben join us for this panel discussion to learn bow three companies are helping their employees balance these integral aspects of their lives. Wednesday, Nmti 19,10m 5:30-7*0 pm 301 Rudder PANEL PARTICIPANTS ftoi Mtmn Business Partner Program Manager IBM 1 Marina Poza-Grise Director of Human Resources for Chemical Solutions Enterprise DuPont Karo Pelecky Manager Ernst& Young WORLD Page 12 THE BATTALION Thursday, ManM Election apathy runs high in Russi: Pit irsday, March Putin, politics viewed as having little impact on daily lk ase \ CPIELYABINSK, Russia (AP) - Tractors arc the key to how Valery Pozdeyev will vote in Russia’s presi dential eleclion on Sunday. Look at the output at the Chelyabin sk Tractor Factory, a mini-metropolis of tin-roofed warehouses, grease puddles and conveyor belts that dominates the skyline and economy ofthe Siberian city where Pozdeyev is deputy director. In 1989, during the communist era, the factory made 2,580 tractors a month. By 1998, output had plummeted to just eight tractors a month; now, 250 tractors a month roll off factory assembly lines. Pozdeyev credits acting President Vladimir Putin with the recent growth and plans to vote for him. In industrial regions across Russia, Putin is reaping political benefits from an improved economy that has con vinced many that, as Pozdeyev puts it, “returning to the Soviet era is not the only path to prosperity.’' Not that Chelyabinsk, 950 miles east of Moscow, is prosperous now; it’s just not as poor as a few years ago, during the worst of Russia’s post-Soviet recession. The region’s renowned nuclear re search facilities sit idle. Residents who contracted cancer living down stream from nuclear test sites cannot afford treatment. Major highways are slalom courses of months-old snow and ice because most snowplows are broken. Organized crime and corrup tion are rampant, as are deals for barter instead of cash. Bus stops are plastered with posters offering jobs at metallurgy and ma chine-building factories, a welcome sign after terland say whoever heads the govern ment won’t make any difference. Around Russia’s regions, many voters feel be trayed and alienated by Kremlin politics after a decade in which a small elite amassed fortunes while their salaries and savings shriveled. “Moscow has nothing to do w ith us. The politicians there are corrupt and don’t care years of layoffs. Shoppers swarm an outdoor market of fering cheap Chinese radios. Putin has almost nothing to do with // People are no longer waiting for salvation from Moscow. ... That is a key step away from communism. — Oleg Kozmin Chelyabinsk environmental activist what happens to us,” Nina Fazeyeva said, tucking her white hair into her fuzzy headscarf and watching over her wares: homegrown beets and car rots piled on an overturned cardboard box Chelyabinsk environmental active; Regional leaders are wary of] suggestions that he would streoslfej central government. “Moscow is an islandthatis farther and farther from its sufe] said Pyotr Sumin, the ChelyaW gion’s centrist governor. Chelyabinsk has seen paigning for the presidential vat only election billboards downtot for a minor candidate, D/habrailov, who most local votol never heard of. Even without campaign poster, port for Putin in Russia's regki strong. Much of that is thanks to what’s happening in Russia’s economy. Analysts tie the boost in domestic pro duction to the 1998 ruble crash, which forced most consumers to abandon ex pensive imports and reach for long-for gotten homegrown brands. While Putin is widely expected to win, some people in Russia’s vast hin- at an outdoor market. Reformers say that frustration might not be such a bad thing for democracy. “People are no longer waiting for sal vation from Moscow. They realize they have to take more responsibility for themselves. That is a key step away from communism,” said Oleg Kozmin, a _ . . Jisturmiu domination of regional media, t | risa . ccn (j lav ish the acting president win y as , wec [ < - cai attention. ry had testa It is also thanks to Putm’simfl j (imc |n |- n resolute, dependable leader afltns ..yearsuspc ol upheavals. jcYankees’ no longer think about SoinH j n ^ j- rst s production levels,” Pozdeyev sail just want stability.” At the tractor factorv. the n the last tv llegal drug made a grai he world of gue Baseba lelinquent a itinues to gr names such :gers pitche m, Atlanta [fielder Otis elder Tony e has come e to the list The questio once produced tanks for the RedAj in World War II is back in action,! oouncemem seemed apol nee to resto ijhtention to jtlrug addicti mg tank engines that are being dp j ronv j r the Chechny a war, and parts forP] nnmhimsel tanks that Russia is selling to India Australia offended by NRA video SYDNEY, Australia (AP) Australian officials demanded to day that the National Rifle Associ ation pull a video airing on its Web site claiming that the nation’s gun reform laws had backfired. The video, presented as a tele vision news story, claims that crimes involving guns have in creased in Australia since the laws, which ban all semi-automatic rifles, semi-automatic shotguns and pump action shotguns, were introduced. Federal Attorney (Jeneral Daryl Williams said the NRA was using inaccurate statistics and urged the group to remove “any reference to Australia” from its Web site. “1 find it quite offensive that the NRA is using the very successful gun reform laws introduced in 1996 as the basis for promoting ownership of firearms in the Unit ed States,” he said. Williams sent a letter today to NRA president Charlton Heston, asking for the immediate with drawal of misleading information. Australia’s gun-related homi cide rate was 0.28 per 100,000 peo ple in 1998 compared to 4 per 100,000 in the United States, Williams wrote in the letter, which w as distributed to reporters. “There are many things that Australia can learn from the Unit ed States,” he w-rote. “How to manage firearm ownership is not one of them.” Australia adopted the gun laws after an April 1996 rampage by Martin Bryant, who opened fire with military-style rifles at the Port Arthur historic site in the state of Tasmania. Bryant, who killed 35 people and injured 19, is serv ing a life sentence. More than 640,000 firearms were removed from the Australian community under a buyback pro gram. The NRA video shows footage of guns being sawed to pieces, and thousands of destroyed guns piled on scrap heaps. South Australia’s Attorney General Trevor Griffin said he was not interviewed by the NRA and a quote from him was taken from a previous interview and used out of context. The video claims that after the gun laws took effect, armed rob bery in Australia w'ent up 69 per cent, assaults involving guns rose 28 percent, gun murders increased 19 percent and home invasions rose 21 percent. It does not give a source for the data. Dr. Adam Graycar, director of the Australian Institute of Crimi nology, said the statistics were misleading. He said the latest annual crime figures, for 1998, showed that as saults had increased but that most attacks did not involve guns. He said homicides decreased and were only rarely committed with guns. Because there were so many other factors involved, such as pop ulation change, it was “enormous ly difficult” to draw conclusions about what effect the gun laws have had on the level of crime, Graycarsaid. “ft is a very long bow to draw,” to claim the ban led to an increase in crime, he told Australian Broad casting Corp. radio. “What we’ve got here is an American group with a heavy gun culture — guns figure very signif- ; icantly in crime in the United States — trying to transpose that into Australia. There is no compar ison,” Graycar said. Flood risk in Mozambique :ently publisl Tcotmng cai overing Lif gger was a s uncil on Ale cejust one; larent intere: citizen i: his actions s S' TANZANIA MOZAMBIQU Harare O % ZIMBAB 150 miles Sa vc- K- 150 km Indian Ocean SOUTH AFRICA •Chokwe • Xai-Xai / OMaputo iWAZILAND | Low-lying southern Mozambican towns are at risk of being flooded for the second time in than a month Source: Compiled from AP wire reports elieve it televisic there th; ire ignorance n than The I gie Review i igram is “Po tii Bill Mahe Broadcast v BC, “PI” is a Je ofcelebrit mshowcasin ents and pop rving as host. Li evision land; kelift with i rent framewo .[However, th trious flaw v is setup — thi tebrities that on “PI” ofi ipear to be ex- Neeson declines hometown award due to controversi BALLY MENA, Northern Ireland (AP) — Actor Liam Nee son has turned down an award from his home town, saying it would be “inap propriate” to ac- NEESON cept given the rancor the honor has generated between local Catholics and Protestants. Neeson, 48, was offered the Free dom ofthe Borough of Ballymena ear lier this month. On Tuesday, he turned down the award because some local politicians from the Democratic Unionist Party, a hardline Protestant party, had voted against it. Party members claimed Neeson made derogatory remarks about grow ing up in the predominantly Protestant town northwest of Belfast. Neeson was quoted in a U.S. magazine last year as saying he felt “second class” as a Catholic. Neeson, best-known for his starring roles in “Schindler’s List” and “Star Wars: Episode I — The Phantom Men ace,” denied the accusations and said he was proud of Ballymena. “Although I very much appreciate, and am greatly honored by, the major ity decision of Ballymena council to offer me the Freedom ofthe Borough, I nonetheless believe that it would be inappropriate for me to accept in view of the stated opposition of some mem bers and the resultant controversy,” Neeson wrote in a statement. In a letter to the city council, he added: “I will always remain very proud of my upbringing.” “I regard the enduring support i of 4 which I have received over® years from all sections of the coi munity in Ballymena as than sufficient recognition success which I may have achie^ as an actor.” James Currie, mayor of Ihe Cot®! Antrim borough, called the “desperately sad.” “Ballymena and NorthernIreN have lost out,” Currie said, have been a golden opportunity® 11 a terrific boost for tourism. IW the people who voted against him® alize that.” n 1 I ,e "In# | Help a Kid Smife Stand for a White k March 25-2610am to 10am Archery Room NEC Center H IS NOT TOO LATE TO (JET INVOLVED fok mode mmi'itiiov CAM; ninriii: uviiy at 111)301120 OK EMAIL AT CSACII.'l! VAIIOO.COSI ARE YOU LOOKING FOR 4 CHALLENGE? THE Forum SSRS Properties Inc. is now hiring leasing consultants for the springed summer semesters. Apply todayat 410 5.Texas Ave or call 846-4242 if you have any questions. mely simple- inded and do\ ;ht ignorant.' ey argue a sid pic, they oftei [off arbitrary :js and source |rto support rational logic, g matters wor aher does not .?i! impartial i or. Instead, he tcibly berates lests when the fort in hiding 1?I” and P gitimate sourc ese flaws and dr viewers, ai tests are needi The list of id linfully length st month and “Don’t you t »sh to say that e...and then hn Henton. No, John. Tl He. The worm tiry of her pe< useless murde in no positi John — a later airi •ting America iumption that •with declinir The numbe mdguns illega 44 percent in en’t enforcing News flash, with district Hits preside o •n prosecution , not Clir slice.