Heading for a Wedding? Compass College Ministries would like to invite all engaged couples and those just thinking about getting engaged to join us for a 6-week seminar on how to build a lasting marriage. . K; . Jk.' . Jk; . X; . A.' . Jk; . Jk; . JC . X.' Tuesday evenings beginning April 2nd Rudder Tower Room 301, 8:30 pm Sign up by March 29th $75 per couple For registration information please call 779-2434 * Registration Includes: Seminar Notebook • PREPARE Evaluation & Reading • Marriage Enrichment Material NINETIETH ANNIVERSARY INAUGURAL LECTURE CELEBRATION Tuesday, March 26, 2002 3:00 p.m. - Rudder Theater Reception following in Faculty Club Dr. Harry O. Kunkel, Dean Emeritus College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Texas A&M University “What has it Meant and What it Means to be the Leader in Agriculture and Life Sciences' Dr. Michael V. Martin Vice President for Agriculture and Natural Resources University of Florida - Gainesville “Will the Land-Grant University be Relevant in the 21“ Century?* 'All Faculty and Students are invited to attend. The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences 90 th Anniversary Lecture Series is being held in conjunction with Texas A&M University 's 125 th Anniversary Celebration and is sponsored in part by the Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost. Better Ingredients, Better Pizza. Thursday Specfcil O ¥ 1 Topping Art Iirlimlwii pizzas Pick-up or delivery IMorthgate 601 University Dr. 979-846-3600 Post Oak Square 100 Harvey Road, Ste. D 979-764-7272 Bryan 3414 East 29 ,h Street 979-268-7272 Coming Soon! 1700 Rock Prarie, Ste. A 979-680-0508 LARGE 1 TOPPING Pick-up oi* delivery after 10 p.m. Sunday: "1 *1 a.m. - midnight IX/londay - Wednesday: 1 *1 a.m. - *1 a.m. Thursday: 1 1 a.m. - 2 a.m. Friday & Saturday: 1 "I a.m. - 3 a.m. Faculty Performing An Arts Showcase Friday, March 22 7:30 PM Free - No Ticket Needed! - Free Can your Music profs prove they can play the man dolin? Ever wondered if your Shakespeare professor longs to play Hamlet? Rudder Can your dance professor perform Swan Lake? Auditorium Presented by: Dept, of Health & Kinesiology MSC 0PAS See your professors practice what they teach! 8A Thursday, March 21, 2002 SCI|TECH THE BATTALIOI Wild salmon discovery FALL CREEK. Ore. (AP) — The forest is cloaked in mist, a chilling gray that drifts through the mossy tangle of limbs. It is barely dawn, but Ronald Yechout is wide awake, recounting the day he stumbled across the Fall Creek salmon massacre. “Here,” says Yechout, striding across a narrow bridge. One day in November 1998, Yechout stopped at Fall Creek while elk-hunting to admire the annual return of coho salmon from the ocean. “The river was full of fish, absolutely crawling with them,” he says. Yechout (pronounced YEK- it) was delighted. But then he heard thunks and thwacks com ing from the nearby fish hatch ery. Walking over, he found hatchery workers with baseball bats, clubbing thousands of salmon to death. What's going on? he asked. The answer puzzled him, then outraged him, then launched him on a crusade that, three years later, has helped throw the Northwest's salmon-recovery effort into turmoil. Along this creek in the Oregon woods, scientists tried to create a salmon that equaled the wild fish made by nature — and then, deciding they had failed, they set about erasing their mis- Killing salmon to protect salmon? Yechos: standing by a creek now bereft of fish, thinksfc is no way to save a species. In the 1800s, when industrial society arrivedij the Pacific Northwest, the salmon began to disaf. pear. Traps and nets intercepted millions of fii Dams blocked rivers. Log drives scoutti streambeds clean of fish eggs. Nobody wished ill for the fish. The fivespea of Pacific salmon and their cousin, the steelhea; were a vital part of the economy. Two paths to salmon survival Hatcheries have helped stabilize the salmon population and account lor about 25 percent otaly#^ salmon entering the North Pacific But biologists agree that fish produced in the controlled hatdw, environment cannot substitute for wild salmon Surviving in the wild Females deposit their eggs In the gravel of streambeds where ttiey are fertilized by males. Only a low percentage survive predators, floods or droughts to hatch. Reared In hatcheries Hatchery workers harvest and unite egjs spent) from selected (isti Yields as] and i survival rates are often higher, buttfiege« pool is smaller, with a smaller range of tnc such as homing instinct or disease resslara Feeding off a yoll in the nest but rr In the hatchery, alevin thrive without Itint from predators and environmental vanaWa In this developmental stage, fnl to feed, avoid predators and pn themselves with camouflage Responding to both genetics and domestication, fry rise to the suifaca anticipating food when they see a hurrar As they begin their migration to the sea, smotts start the conversion to salt water conditions Release usuaty occurs at this stage Unit wiki fish, hatchery Hah tend not to staggr their migratione Thus the group imnt - , vulnerable to environmental threats Salmon species genen ilty spend between one and four years maturing in the ocean before reluming to their N native streams to spawn Hatchery salmon ate not yet uf sustaining In one study, for eve’i _ 100 fish of wild parents, only 16w: produced by the same nuntwcf hatchery fish spawning m stem take with bats. SOURCE N&tionGt Mann* Fiahmetnz S&rv*c& GMOs Continued from page 7A incorporated into the plant are injected into Agrobacterium, which is then added to plant tis sue. Then the Agrobacterium integrates the genes into the DNA of the plant. The gene gun method is not as commonly used. A very small particle of gold is coated with the beneficial genes. Then the particles are blasted into plant tissue, where some attach to plant DNA and eventually fuse. Private companies have spent billions of dollars devel oping these biotechnologies. Rathore said these companies own the rights to these seeds, which means farmers can only use genetically modified seeds for one season; they must buy new seed every year. This poses a problem for poorer countries that cannot afford the new technology. But much research is being done to help developing coun tries. At A&M, research using traditional plant breeding methods and genetic modifica tion of crops is being carried out to benefit places like Sub- Saharan Africa, India and Pakistan. Students from other countries are taking knowledge from A&M back to their home countries. Rathore said a project in Switzerland to genetically modify rice has the potential to greatly benefit millions of people. Swiss researchers modified genes in rice to increase levels of beta- carotene, which produces vitamin A. With the rise of biotechnolo gy and genetically modified crops, some question whether traditional methods to improve crop yields will sustain. “Traditional methods still have a big role and will continue to play a role. Biotechnology will never replace them,” Rathore said. In fact, Norman Borlaug, the father of the Green Revolun: and recipient of the Nok Peace Prize in 1970 fori efforts to improve agriculture^ India and Pakistan, is a strcs supporter for biotechnolog Much of Borlaug's contrite tions have included plant-bree; ing methods to product drought-resistant wheat. Researchers continue « improve agriculture throu'i biotechnology and tradition plant breeding methods hope that all people will benefit Stelly said nature is fullof good things that have not ken harnessed, and biotechnolee) has much to offer. Rathoretaii consumers who are eduofi and told about the bene® would not be afraid of technology <1 Aggie sc blanks I- Texas A& # pitcher Jes threw her son. game shutoi_j as the No. 2 : team defeats Slataper h game throug before surrer to start the fi 1 Senior Kell'y vided the Agg offense they blasting a sol the second fourth home son. Fergusoi 11 game hil the longest on the team. A&M (24-6; Oklahoma thi: Arnott a Dallas af DALLAS (AP Jason Arnott v be traded fr Jersey Devils Stars, the me had one nice : has gotten 1 greatest moi career over an Two years aj ond overtime game of the finals, Arnott Jersey's ch winning goal was the firs thought of on of the deal wo started focusii fie was going. "It was the fi brought up ir loom today," A Stelly said he onceheardai a biotechnology conference that “the person who has food on their plate has many prob lems. The person who has no food on their plate has only one problem.” •1 1 Authorized Warranty Service Center ITS TIME YOU HAD THE FREE Shuttle Service ’ Factory Trained & Certified Technicians DOUGLASS Clean and Comfortable Waiting Areas ’ State-of-the-Art Diagnostic Equipment ! IMISSAISUl Driven Genuine Nissan Parts with 12 Month/12,000 Mile Limited Warranty Nobody knows your Nissan like Douglass Nissan For service appointments call 764-7726 1001 Earl Rudder Freeway South, College Station ■ MSC CIA aml SGA present. D X 'EV-S.fu Symposium Panelists will discuss how the concept of diversity impacts their occupation, and the diversity issues challenging Texas A&M. Audience members will also have the opportunity to engage in a Q&A session with the panelists. Director of Hillei Foundation, Rabbi Peter Tarlow Group VP of Diversity & People Development, HEB, Winell Herron Texas State Representative District 115, Mike Villarreal Professor of Recreation, Parks, Tourism, and Sports, Dr. David Scott Director of Admissions, Dr. Frank Ashley Professor of Speech Communications, Moderator: Dr. Marshall Scott Poole Please contact Joe Williams at 979-845-1515 for more information. Check i out on t for n info Thursday, March 21 st , 6pm Rudder Theatre FREE ADMISSION cla.msc.tamu.edu .J.U & sga.tamu.edu Persons with disabilities, please call (979) 845-15J5 to Inform us of your special needs- PI :< rv.xt STUDENT GOVERNMENT (TY i ASSOCIATION 5TLXi\S AtfcM t'NIVFJtSITY