TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY WATCH by SEIKO Someday all watches will be made this way. A Seiko quartz timepiece officially licensed by the University. Featuring a richly detailed three dimensional re-creation of the University seal on the 14kt gold-finished dial. Electronic quartz movement quaranteed accurate to within fifteen seconds per month. Full three year Seiko warranty. All Gold 2-Tone $285.00 $265.00 Leather Strap $200.00 Karav'f/tg' DOUGLAS JEWELRY 1667-B TEXAS AVE. COLLEGE STATION, TX 77840 Class of ‘yS Mail Orders VCcIconic 1 -409-693-0677 The Texas A&M Debate Society presents Resolved: The Republican Vice-Presidential candidate should he Colin Powell. Thursday, April 13, 2000 7:00pm Rudder 301 * Ia The topic will he debated hy members of the Texas A&M Debate Society President and Mrs. Ray M. Bowen '58 and Vice President for Student Affairs Malon Southerland '65 invite you and your family to drop by their campus homes from 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Saturday, April 15, 2000 The President's home is located on Throckmorton Street across from Duncan Drill Field. The Gilchrist-Southerland residence is located at 100 Throckmorton Street across from the Sanders Corps of Cadets Center. Light refreshments will be served at both homes. NATION Page 12 THE BATTALION Thursi. ■ Million Mom March tijni call for gun control actiine SHORT HILLS, N.J. (AP) — It took an unforgettable image of young chil dren escaping a racist gunman to trans form Donna Dees-Thomases from a wealthy suburban mother into a grass roots activist. The image was from Aug. 10, when a white supremacist opened lire on a Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills, Calif. Dees-Thomases was flipping chan nels when she saw the video of children the same age as her daughters crossing the street hand-in-hand with police officers. “These were my kids crossing the street,” Dees-Thomases said. "My kids go to a JCC. Anybody could walk in. It was just crazy.” One week later, Dees-Thomases reg istered a Website, and launched the Mil lion Mom March campaign. Hie grass roots effort is expected to become the nation’s largest gun control demonstra tion to date. The Mother’s Day rally is expected to draw 100,000 people to the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Other demon strations are scheduled in 20 cities na tionwide, including Tulsa. Okla.. Los Angeles, Denver and Portland, Ore. The group is pressing Congress for stricter gun control, including measures to require all handgun owners to be li censed and registered, require built-in child safety locks and limit handgun pur chases to one a month. “Mothers are certainly an impor tant voice in this debate, and they are a voice that has not been very strong until this point,” said Shannon Frat- taroli, researcher at the Center for Gun Policy and Research at Johns Hopkins University. “We have yet to see really a grass roots movement in this area, and maybe that’s what is needed in order to change voting behavior.” National Rifle Association spokesman Bill Powers said the organi zation was unconcerned about the appeal of the May 14 rally. “It is one of the great freedoms of America” to express oneself political ly, he said. man’s late-night talk IINGT name Million Mom Mari. 0 f jast-min, the success oi the the rnor Granda Hills shooting, Dees- Thomases consid ered herself rather apolitical. Today, her cluttered base ment office in this wealthy suburban community is adorned by bright pink posters and T-shirts reading, “We’re looking for a few good moms.” Dees- Thomases, a part- time publicist for David Letter- y realize ihe rally lor black empower. ^ c i on ’ t ^ ington in 1995, and theahjj b( . time to v lion Youth March, . t Hf, an msl Lhe campaign hasp^m [pc; by word of mouth-ioT C()lintants mothers working out oft! j suc | 1 an U1 out of an office in Washing am | evcn p Organizers have recraitlj u)nsK | C r t by calling parent-teadierg Loleminent es, synagogues and vvome ltb | eac h y e ai support, Dees-1 homasest year's n It is a tme instinctot jg midnirihl lecting their children,"she ; h of New Li it is totally primitive." .refit’s a day . fifing cente Moms have their march Mothers across the country are expected to participate in a9/ - on DC,a fY./j nn I on Mother's Day. Here is a look at the cities where rallies,cai ^ Mom March, are planned — on Mother's day or the prewi Minneapolis/ St. Pai • Lansinj If you owe m cannot be be check or mo short on cast San Francisco _ ■ Sacramento Chicago# Kansas • City # Champaigiv Urbana • • Los Angeles San* Diego • Tulsa • Phoenix 1 Dallas' Forth Worth E-fil corr You Department electronically balance due checking or 1 Source Mtfhon Mom Mart News in Brief Wildfire destroys 13,000 Fla. acres NAPLES, Fla. (AP) — A wildfire that had burned 13,000 acres stalled today on the edge of Big Cy press Swamp after destroying three houses and forcing people to flee other homes in the area. Wind was expected to pick up during the late afternoon and push the fire toward the south east and away from populated ar eas on the edge of Naples, fire of ficials said. The RV resort, about 2 1/2 miles from the fire’s edge, sits on a road that serves as the east ern boundary of Naples’ devel oped areas. Earlier, fire crews had feared "very aggressive fire behavior," said state fire spokesman Jim Harrell. Advancing flames caught three firefighters' vehicles on Monday, al though their operators escaped. An elementary school was closed for the day today in the area about 10 miles east of Naples, or 130 miles south of Tampa. Residents of 50 homes within a mile of the fire had been urged to evacuate Tuesday, and 10 busi nesses were asked to close, said Deborah Wright, a Collier County spokesperson. The fire started Sunday in the Picayune Strand State Forest, be tween Naples and the Big Cypress National Preserve and Everglades National Park. It was blamed on hu mans, but the exact cause has not been determined. Expert says settlers poiso Ch ere An' 1888-2 PA Y- charge the b MasterCard, or Discover c RALEIGH, N.C. could be a macabre seque Pocahontas story, a pat| says many of the settlers' at Jamestown may havelS due is less th soned with arsenic — pf ; be paid with! Capt. John Smith himself,■ Dr. Frank HanCOCk fOurce: Internal Rev writings by Smith and othe. settlers in Jamesta 4 search of a medic why so many colonistsdiej two years after the firstp! English settlement! established in 1607. His conclusion: colonists may been 1 TAMU Symphonic and Concert Bad The premiere concert bands of Aggieland proudly present their I Parents Weekend Concert This Friday, April 14 Rudder Theater - 7:30 RM. Tickets at door: Adults $5 - Students $3 Come listen to an excellent variety of exciting, entertaining i * THE MELROSE LIRgl ♦ PRIVACY • Your OWN private bedroom/bathroom suite ■ Furnished or unfurnished ♦ PEACE OF MIND • IDEE 24-hour monitored intrusion alarm - Gated entrance with fully fenced perimeter ■ StalMf-thfrart keyiess lock system - Individual lock and key for each bedroom ♦ FINANCIAL FREEDOM - Individual lease (Provides VOL Financial Irvtfpwdmtrltwt*' 1 ’ • Roommate matching - No utility deposits ♦ LIFESTYLE -Resort-style swimming pool -Lighted basketball, tennis and i - Fitness center, computer lab anil -Cool monthly parties will ffili Rents Stalling At Rer Person Per Month Furnished H PH HIM ENTS* Equal Housing Opportunity 601 Luther St. West, College Station, TX 77840 409-680-3680 ♦ wvvw.melrose.com