• Iron Maidens Monday. July |( protes s of lynch, 1 people to come forward! ition, and he has asked^ Musgrove and theU.S.)i$ nent to launch an invest^ n't imagine what it would | ie a black person livinghi it fear of being lynched,"j tz, 22, a Tulane Universitiij 10 drove to the rally frt > with about 200 going to rally here forjns the systematic viol black people." e neighbors have said jo happy teen who wool immitted suicide. Lire's a lot of prejudicea Kokomo," said resident ister, whose son Comte] the same school as le something is doneabotfj nie Mobley, whose Ik mett Till was killed inMtJ in 1955, supposedly ng at a white woman, h /vith Johnson's mother, Nr the demonstration andofcl •port. isidere Listen to KAMI) 90.9 FM at 1:57 p.m. for details on a stabbing in Bryan. • Check out The Battalion online at k battalion.tamu.edu. Student Recreation Center encourages women to utilize free weights Page 3 Weather: Partly cloudy with a hiqh of 97 and a low of 74. TUESDAY July 11,2000 Volume 106-Issue 165 6 pages *■1:101 AI 6 ft’j ^1 Pi ^ CW t IV entral Baptist leaves Southern Baptist Convention Chris Cunico The Battalion For the past several years, disagreements ^fundamental issues have been dividing the buthern Baptist community in Texas. Cen- jil Baptist Church, a congregation which has jrved Bryan-College Station residents for tars, has recently chosen to break with the ptist General Convention of Texas (BGCT), estate's subset of the Southern Baptist Con- ntion (SBC). Conservative and liberal sects continually shover scripture interpretations and views controversial topics. Reverepd Chris Osborne, senior pastor for entral Baptist, said there are several reasons for his congregation's decision to disassociate with the BGCT, ranging from stances on abor tion to the delegation of church money. Osborne said the BGCT board's hypocriti cal pro-choice stance, which it discusses on its Website, contradicts the pro-life views it has ex pressed to its members in the past and those shared by conservative congregations like Cen tral Baptist. In the past, every Southern Baptist congre gation would donate money to the state con vention, which would then keep a percentage before sending the remainder of the money to the national organization, the SBC. Osborne said that instead of allocating all funding to or ganizations associated with the Southern Bap tist Convention, the BGCT has begun to allow church money to be given to non-affiliated causes and congregations, such as the Cooper ative Baptist Fellowship. "The elected leadership of the BGCT has “They're not interest ed in a convention change, but a change in denomination” — Chris Osborne senior pastor for Central Baptist been the reason for these new liberal stances," Osborne said. "Charles Wade, executive direc tor, and Clyde Glazener, president of the exec utive board, are responsible for altering the di rection of the BGCT." Osborne said that by removing Baylor Uni versity from its domain and establishing its own seminaries, tire BGCT has further offend ed more-conservative members of the SBC. He said the changes in the traditional operations are the beginnings of movement, orchestrated by the BGCT's board of directors, to separate BGCT from the SBC completely and create a new denomination. Those congregations that choose to remain loyal to the Southern Baptist Church have the option of joining the Southern Baptists of Texas to in place of their former BGCT membership. "This November in Corpus Christi, the leaders of the BGCT are expected to vote to leave the SBC," Osborne said. "They have al ready filed a name change. They're not inter ested in a convention change, but a change in denomination." Martha Barton, administrative assistant of the Creath Brazos Baptist Association, said that in the past several years, an increasing number of churches in Brazos County dissatisfied with recent movements of the BGCT has chosen to break from this statewide convention. See Church on Page 6. Then Aftemiat which brokers existing; main names in the Units States, sued ICANNot| permission to register if ones. In a settlement® nounced Friday, ICAS agreed to the request, r conditions. Larger issues are f tentious as well. ICANN proposed alii to appoint its board,®! groups complained !5 process was undeimrs lCANNcavedin| Internet users dirafete five of 19 board merit® Other critics, citinglr lays getting new names, complain Ity ICANN favors business' over individuals.Largec porations with valusi trademarks have resists new names becauseob be rsqu a tters—indivi^ who grab domain nS for up to $35 apiece# ) sale at thousands,eves 1 lions of dollars. Circus, circus! led attack by a few crime,” said De •n for Guatemala’s r lent attracted so manype' •e members of a family® rried people and su :hez said, ten, including a 60-yeart 26, 23,18 and 17. Student board pushes for tax-free textbooks (left) Ringmaster Michael James McGowan steps in to the cen ter ring to introduce The Greatest SHow on Earth, (top right) Animal trainer Mark Oliver Gebel presents a leopard during the opening parade, (center right) Anton Beliakov performs his strap act for the audience before the show, (bottom right) Kids watch in amazement as the trapeze artists fly through the air. Stuart Hutson The Battalion Junior speech communications major Katherine Volanska, fed up with paying prices at local bookstores, now purchas es her books online. Her reason is sim ple: lower prices due partly to the ab sence of the bookstore sales tax. "The prices we have to pay for'text- books are crazy," Volanska said. "We're college students, we have very little money, and no one should be trying to make a profit off our education — not the government, not anyone." Echoing Volanska's opinion, the Chan cellor's Student Advisory Board (CSAB), a student group from all the Texas A&M System schools that advises the chancellor about the wishes of the cumulative stu dent body, has embarked on a campaign to convince the Texas Legislature to pass a bill ending sales tax on college textbooks. "If the state cannot tax tuition, why should they be able to tax textbooks, which are also a necessary cost of educa tion?" said Rob Ferguson, who was elect ed chairperson of the CSAB in June and is a senior political science major at A&M. Ferguson said the force behind the campaign was West Texas A&M Univer sity Bookstore manager William Hocken- smith, who realized that textbook prices were increasing faster than the standard economic inflation rate. "Students now are paying much more than they were paying 20 years ago, and that is taking inflation into account," Hockensmith ,said. "The prices of text books are not just too high, they are irra tional — and while textbooks are just a part of the cost of education, they can male a big difference when just as many students drop out of college because of their checkbook as because of their GPAs." Senior Rob Ferguson, chair of the CSAB, supports the bill that calls for an end to sales tax on all college textbooks. A bill which would do away with state sales tax on textbooks was considered by the Texas State Legislature during its last legislative meeting. It was never brought out of committee for discussion by the general assembly, despite active lobbying See Books on Page 6. News in Brief istor against irtrait removal AIMCE AMI AND DOG! iccinations nd Neuters eatments In order to inform the pub- &bout the removal of the hrist portrait, Dan Bates, pastor and editor of the |h/ng but the Truth, So Help God newspaper, will hold press conference 9 a.m. ly in the parking lot of the bb Gilchrist Building, want to tell the world , jjow liberals, like liberals at nCl Ireatmeifcas A&M, can do mind optrol and censorship, ley can have pictures tak- nldown off the wall,” lafes said. ||ast month, Gilchrist’s - jprtrait, which portrayed ini sitting in front of a like- |ss of Robert E. Lee, was Teaching Hospital ‘||oved from the entryway ant. Discount appli#e Gibb Gilchrist Texas Base identify your5 £ |i s P ortat ' on Institute it in order to rec eC in g° n West Cam P us - tt in oraer to rete Ber n ieFetti,aspokesper- nd appointments "bn for the Texas Trans- ■ation Institute (TTI), said iportrait was removed be- use it may offend visitors 1 students of Texas A&M. tti said the decision to ve the 47-year-old por- § which had hung in the ay since last Novem ber, came after a student approached the director of TTI, Dr. Herbert Richardson, with concerns that the por trait may connotate racism because of Lee’s associa tion with the Corifederacy. Bates said A&M offi cials withheld information from media sources about the real reason for the por traits removal. “A male political science professor conducted a sur vey of political science stu dents as to whether the Gilchrist portrait offended them or not,” Bates said. “The professor found that more students were offend ed than not, so he sent a fe male student to talk to the director of the building, Herb Richardson. This is censor ship, and the U.S. Constitu tion prohibits censorship.” Bates said Dr. Jerry Gas ton, vice president for ad ministration, told him that because TTI is not directly connected to Texas A&M, the political science profes sor could not do anything about the portrait, nor did he have the authority to send a student to request the portrait be removed. Richardson could not be reached for comment. Blood mobiles offer donation sites on A&M campus Joseph Pleasant The Battalion When Dana Shuler, a junior psycholo gy major gives blood, she does so out of a sense of responsibility. "I give every time," Shuler said. "I am [blood type] O positive, and it is a uni versal donor so it can be donated to any blood type." Paula Newell, operations manager for Carter Blood Care in Dallas, said giving blood is everyone's responsibility. "[Givingblood] is a wonderful commu nity service. Everyone should take owner ship of the blood supply," Newell said. Newell said there is a nationwide blood shortage in the summer because people are traveling and students are out of school. Newell said high school students and college students are a major source of donated blood. Newell also said more blood is needed in the summer months. "The need rises because people choose to have more elective surgery and there is an increase in accidents on vacation, high ways, and at home which require blood transfusions," Newell said. Newell said men are encouraged to do nate blood for the sake of their own health. "Men build up iron in their blood. If it is not released, that buildup can cause heart problems later in life. Donating blood is a way of releasing iron in the blood," Newell said. Teresa Evangelista, territory manager for the Red Cross, said donors with O-pos- itive or O-negative blood types are need ed most often because they are universal donors. Evangelista said these blood types are used most often in emergency rooms because their blood can be given to any person regardless of his or her blood type. Evangelista said there is a common myth that donors with body piercings cannot donate blood. "Donors do 'not have to wait a year af ter they receive a body piercing to give blood, which is a common misunder standing," Evange lista said. But, Newell said, certain groups are ex cluded from donat ing, such as pregnant women, people who have suffered a heart attack or stroke, and people who are HIV positive. Evangelista said the flexibility of stu dents' schedules has contributed to the success of past blood drives. "Students usually have a flexible schedule, and we set up locations around campus for their convenience," Evangelista said. While on campus this week. Carter Blood Care will offer donors the op portunity to donate using the 2 units of Red Blood Cells (2RBC) automated do nation machine. The 2RBC machine takes only red blood cells from the donor's blood and then returns the blood to the body. Newell said the donor feels fine after the procedure, and the blood bank gets two units of red blood cells. People who donate blood are ex cluded from donating for 56 days. Those who donate using the 2RBC ma chine are excluded for 112 days because they are donating two units of blood in stead of one. Blood mobiles from the Red Cross and Carter Blood Care will be located at vari ous places on Texas A&M's campus July 10-14 for their blood drives. Blood mobiles will be parked on campus from 9 a.m-6 p.m. Donors receive a free T-shirt along with juice and cookies after donating. I Rudder Fountain July 10-14 Rudder Fountain July 10 14 10a.m.-6p.m. 9a.m.-5p.m. Spence Street July 1012 Fisk Pond July 10-14 10a.m. 6p.m. 9a.m. 4p.m. Wehner Building July 13-14 Bio/Bio (West Campos) July 10-14 10a.m.-6p.m. 9a.m. 4p.m. Student Rec Center July 10-14 i 3p.m.-9p.m.