News mbs dipping mil: to mid® na n on the per harmonizato e and Cowt>? : re is no cove Irsday, November 15, 2001 100 Fort Hood Idlers prepare deploy to Kuwait |0RT HOOD (AP) - About 300 soldiers at Fort Hood be deployed to Kuwait in next two weeks, post of fi ls said. the soldiers are from the 1st airy Division and from other Corps support elements, said Gen. B.B. Bell, III Corps and Hood commander, he 1st Cavalry Division will be ipped with Abrams tanks, dley infantry, fighting vehicles artillery. Also included will the necessary support struc- e — engineers, intelligence, intenance and communica- ■ns to keep the force moving, ng and, if necessary, fighting. \lthough Peterson classified deployment as large, it is ly about a third the size of the 300 soldiers the 4th Infantry i/ision sent to the National iining Center at Fort Irwin, iif., in March. URS THE BATTALION Page 7A na :ionado shoi performanc; j Letter on the ■d to arrive h 'Austin will be with a variety There is no i the outdoor 5 to be deter Divisio' ■ re is notM louse ill gam fi Man Towel« 1 Diversity conference convenes at A&M By Eric Ambroso THE BATTALION More than 400 officials from Texas universities will gather at Texas A&M today and Friday to discuss ways to enhance cultural diversity at institutions of higher learning. The 12th annual Texas Higher Education Diversity Conference, titled “Diversifying Our Institutions for the 21st Century ... Expanding Paradigms and Possibilities” will focus on promot ing diversity and institutional change. Participants will look at campuses and university visions in order to develop plans to transform Texas academic communities. “Administrators will examine differ ent tools in leading institutions to diver sity. They will then develop strategic plans in order to make changes,” said Megan Paisa, assistant director of Multicultural Services at A&M. “Identifying diversity at institutions in the state of Texas is essential in build ing just communities.” The conference will be divided so administrators, faculty, staff and students will each have tools to assist them in diversifying their institutions. Speakers at the conference will include Dr. Frances Kendall instructing administrators. Dr. James Anderson leading the faculty track, Becky Petitt and Carolyn Sandoval lecturing to staff members, and Breeana Busch guiding students. “I hope to instruct the faculty how to connect diversity to teaching, learning and research,” said James Anderson, vice provost for undergraduate affairs and professor of counselor education at North Carolina State University. “I also plan to show how diversity cannot become a sig nificant part of any university if class rooms are ignored.” Several multicultural organizations at Texas A&M will be involved in the con ference this week. According to Paisa, two of the A&M organizations that will partic ipate are MOSAIC and U-ACT. MOSAIC stands for Maximizing Opportunities for Staff to Achieve an Inclusive Campus. The purpose of this organization is to give the staff at A&M a chance to train their peers on how to promote diversity at Texas A&M. University Awareness for Cultural Togetherness (U-ACT) is a student organ ization that is designed to promote cultur al awareness among students. “A&M is doing a good job moving forward so that people feel accepted here,” Paisa said. “However, diversity has to become a tradition here. A lot of peo ple must be on board in building an inclu sive community.” Continued from Page 1A ;otiate, be smart and they In’t take advantage of you as rst-time buyer.” Fhe most important thing dents should consider is vmuch they can afford and at kind of car is practical, [htfoot said of the BBB’s of car-buying hints. Dealers will be wary of stu- I Us with little or bad credit, (students should take a par- with them if it is their first e buying a car, or else fully llerstand their financial situ- pn, Lightfoot said.The more ormation you have going peach dealership, the better pcan negotiate, he said. Safety features should also at the top of the list when Bering a new car, |Moot said. Breida Keith, a State Farm urancQ agent in College ion, said she insures many lag people and college stu- Itos. After years of experi- jee of dealing with people po are buying cars for the st time, she said she always :ommends that students tduct as much research con ning the safety of the car as economic research. “I always tell my clients to ya car with air bags and a car th lots of metal,” Keith said. Smaller, less expensive s, like Chevrolet Cavaliers d Dodge Neons, have been aled in 10-mile-an-hour jash tests, Keith said. Other ['all cars, like Saturns, are [ry well built, but the most Pportant thing is that stu- (nts know the safety ratings, (e said. (Keith said that A&M stu- (nts are in the best place for lying cars because they have Itions: the surrounding area Id big cities. Bryan-College fetion dealerships are corn- ting with the cities, so stu nts may find better deals re, she said. Similarly, Lightfoot said, the ation costs for dealerships ; less in the Bryan-College ition area as compared to ies, and the costs are priced the vehicles, so students may d better deals here. “One of the biggest mis- akes new car shoppers make sbeing so set on buying a cer- ain type of car they lose the >ower of negotiation,” Ightfoot said. I Another hint for new car loppers is knowing how to nance the car, Keith said, bnsumers should not go for pis that require no down toyment, she said. “I see it happen all the time people don’t put a down •lyment and have no equity •tiilt up from payments, then jey get in a wreck, totaling the jp “ Keith said. “Insurance fly pays for the value of the F, you will still have to pay jhat you owe on the car. Put wn an initial payment and rt payments immediately d build that equity.” Lightfoot said car buying es not have to be difficult |or students. 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