Now Taking Orders SchoCastic ‘Recognition ^Announcements, Caps & Qozims ROTHER’S BOOKSTORES 340 G. BUSH DR. • 907 HARVEY ROAD 303 S. COLLEGE AVE. w % 10 The Guitar Store • Over 100 Guitars in stock • New Guitars from *99.99 •Used Amps, Guitars, & Bass’s •Buy, Sell, Trade, & Consignment’s SEAGULL • GODIN • WASHBURN • SAMICK Located on University behind the Golden Coral 260-7262 I II / \ MEET ME AT SATCHELS $ 1 — Longnecks all day / every day Across the street from Traditions Dorm 260-8850 FREE PARKING BEHIND SHADOW CANYON l\ VIRTUAL BACKGROUND SYSTEM (Hundreds of backgrounds) CMC photographies 846-2174 Just in time for graduation - Professional portraits at starving student prices. CALL FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT 846-2174 Aggie Owned and Operated since 1980. Expires June 1, 2002 Honors Week April 8-13, 2002 Celebrate Honors at Texas A&M University! Schedule of Activities Forum: The Effect of 9/11 on the American Community 6-7:30 pm - Rudder Tower 401 Pizza provided. Bring your appetite and your opinions. Future of Higher Education Lecture Series Dr. Peter Bishop: “Forces Affecting the Future of Education” 7:00 pm - MSC 201 Peace Corps - talk to a former volunteer and Aggie Kimmi McMinn 8:30 pm - Clements Hall Conference Room Open to the public Lechner Lecture Series: Craig Dupen: “The Electoral College” 7:30 pm - Lechner Hall Seminar Room Open to the public Open House - 9:00-11:00 am -101 Acad. Drop by for donuts and coffee Register fora, April 10: April 11: April 12: Honors Day - wear an Honors Shirt Rudder Fountain from 12:00-1:00 PM Come see what we’re up to! Honors Week is sponsored by the University Honors Program Wednesday, April 3, 2002 NATIQ THE BATTALIO On the Go JOHN l.IVAS • THE BATTALION Matt Byle, a sophomore biology major, takes a closer look sentations at the Texas Highway Conference held at the at a display regarding accident avoidance displayed by Hilton Hotel through the weekend. Continental Teves System. The company will be giving pre- Bush wants to ensure early reading President suggests extra training for Head Start teachers PHILADELPHIA (AP) President Bush promised on Tuesday to give American children a chance at “the life long gift of early learning” through better training for teachers in the Head Start pre school program. In a speech before a nearly all-adult audience at a Penn State University campus in sub urban Delaware County, Bush said he would direct the Department of Health and Human Services to begin train ing almost 50,000 Head Start teachers on the best techniques to teach the rudiments of read ing to preschoolers. “Reading is the foundation for all of learning,” Bush said. “Reading to a child early and often can change a child’s life. “A child who cannot identi fy the letters of the alphabet in his or her first year of school runs a real risk of staying behind in school throughout her or his career. We cannot accept this in America.” Bush’s proposal immedi ately drew criticism from members of Congress who challenged him to put more money into his ideas. “The president proposed no additional resources to help states and local communities provide the vital support to fam ilies and children,” said Sep- Jim Jeffords, I-Vt. “The president's is a good first step, but we need to do so much more.” The president announced the proposal during a visit to Pennsylvania in which he also helped raise $l million for state Attorney General Mike Fisher, running unopposed in the Republican gubernatorial pri mary. Former Philadelphia Mayor Edward Rendell is bat tling state Auditor General Robert Casey Jr. for the Democratic nomination. “It's time to make it three governors in a row,” Bush said, referring to former GOP Gov. Tom Ridge, whom he tapped for homeland security director after the Sept. 11 attacks, and Ridge’s successor, Mark Schweiker. Bush defended the massive tax cut he engineered last year. “History will prove us right: By cutting taxes, we saved the country from a significant recession,” Bush said. Of Fisher, he said: “Mike believes in lower taxes, and so do I.” Bush has traveled to Pennsylvania l l times since taking office, more than any other state. Pennsylvania is the nation’s fifth largest in terms of electoral votes, and Democrat Al Gore won it in 2000’s skintight presidential election. Bush said he wants to dedi cate $45 million for research into early literacy programs and practices that work, the same basic goal as another proposal that cropped up Tuesday on Capitol Hill. Sen. Ed w a rd Kennedy, D- Mass., said he and a group of colleagues vraid pro pose giving $5 hi11ion live grants to states years, to coordinate early c®' | hood programs in HeadjU and other preschool progr® in public schools, daycare ce« ters and at home. i The money would go topft grams that care for and teacl children as young as newborns “To make a real different; for our youngest children, must add flesh to the bones ] the president’s commitment, Kennedy said. Stl Four can Station. U; worthy. Wl of the can with some a full-time not seriou: voters. To issues shoi Texas A& Valley con mind on i: solutions 1 cern Aggie dents mus low amonj eligible vof With grei through ef appear at constructio operate, st town overr mayoral cai serious cor More tha Station are course, not has been h ernment fo At the ve services pre is, after all, TH Managing Edt Opinion Edi News Edi News Edi rile Battalion Mi include the . ' fa right t 0 edit I son af0/4 R eec | WWcDonald, I ft) 845-2 6 47 E fellt&ildi FDA says company’s eggs should be regulated COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has accused a biotech company of selling unapproved drugs in the form of eggs containing antibodies produced from vaccinated hens. A federal grand jury in Columbus is investi gating Ovlmmune Inc. after the FDA accused the company of developing and selling unli censed drugs and vaccines for diseases includ ing AIDS, pneumonia and yeast infections. Company president Marilyn Coleman said antibodies in the eggs could boost the immune systems of people who ate them. NEWS IN BRIEF ‘‘The eggs are not drugs; they are dietary supplements,” said Coleman, an assistant professor at Ohio State University from 1976 to 1980. “The chickens are vaccinated like all chickens. All you do is dry the eggs and sell the powder. There's nothing added to the eggs,” she said. The FDA said the company, headquartered at a farmhouse in Richwood, about 35 miles northwest of Columbus, sold its egg products across the nation over the Internet. The agency said the company described the eggs as “magic bullets ... to target and destroy unwanted biologic entities such as cancer.” The Website is no longer operating. The FDA said the company also sought to use Richwood residents in unauthorized medical experiments. It said in court documents that Coe approached the nurse of the North County School District last year seeking mission to serve the eggs to schoolc i _ Coleman wanted to monitor s u according to an FDA search warr ^ n , , ra i Wiley, the school nurse, alerted authorities. Coleman said Monday she had can k giving surplus eggs to the school Dec would cost too much to dry and sto “I thought we could give the s kids and let some have cereal an have eggs and see which one helpe the most,” she said. “But the FDA to ' you do an experiment, we will call it a What doe obe hor I,....-: ' r- . "I choose not to mix drugs and alcohol" ^SVholesaie Diamonds GIA & EGL Certified £3 Adam Prewett Class of 2002 82% of Aggies choose not to use illegal drugs, including marijuana, ecstasy or cocaine. The Choice Is Up To You. http:/ / studentlife.tamu.edu/adep 1 Largest T(. Stock in the Brazos Valle/ John D Hun' 161 ' | Class of 79 J 313 B. South Co i!® g 778 40l College Station, i | 'W