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ML Curtain Call 2002 Friday, November 15th/ 8 PM Cyv K udd&r A udMjyriavn/ TLckety cut MSC Box' Office/ $3 far ibudevuty $5 far adudty ALLEN HONDA DECEMBER GRAP$ ALLEN HAS YOUR HONDA! Select any NEW or CERTIFIED USED Honda and take 90 days until your first payment. Bring your letter of employment to Allen Honda, and drive now, pay later. WHY WAIT? Ask for the Allen Honda Graduate Program C.J. Allen, Class of *45 AGGIES HELPING AGGIES AllenHonda.com ^696-2424 Southwest Parkway at Earl Rudder Freeway College Station,TX 77840 Friday, November 15, 2002 THE battaik Fish R.DeLuna P^Rbo/U ^ E A1U66LE, But Arc Vou Hese For the AJEW HAZKiY PoTTfR, AS U)ELL v You're A 8/6 F/W, X Take it ? 6uys Have Of AlEAlSfXS > pReS'DEA/r OF Th e H>aRFY FAAj CUOS. chapter f b ; You Lor UjELL, THERE'S A'VSEL.F AaJt> HER/HoNE WERE Yo. V Beernuts by Rob Appling Continued fromp Visitors including™ Hartnett White oM Commtssion on Environ Quality, Candilyn executive director of K«- : ! Beautiful and Dick W assistant vice president y" ■ physical plant, willspeak t)i I dents about recycling, with tree information and» w ill be set up at Raj Fountain from 10 a.m.to 'K'\as Recycles Da. . \j ticial because it lets stii™ know that there are i». opportunities right here inQ. Station, said DeanneMass, dent intern at the ]\ Recycling Center and'an renew able resources major. Recycling can be ear Cus money and benefits thee® ment. Maser said. For more informa reuse or Texas Recycl v isit the Web site atwu recyclesday.com. Gender Continued from page 1 solve an institution's problems, Valian said. Women should also make allies and help other women advance. Valian said she is disappointed that after many years of research, women's advance ment is still too slow. Small cases of bias disadvantage women, she said. “Put science to work.” Valian said. “We need to understand and solve problems and the structure of institutions must be recon structed.” Valian will give another lecture on Friday at 10 a.m. in MSC 292A. "I would like for administrators, faculty members and students to walk away from their discussions with Dr. Valian with a clearer understanding of how gender schemata develop." said Kim Covington, program coordinator for the Gender Equity Project. The Gender Equity Project at Texas A&M was developed within the Look College of Engineering and the College of Mary Gre outh Camp [hare of beh “There al onomical, and reuskig'An in Epprig ome of the fom every 1 he cans in t purth to the Unfortunate kho were fc Althougi e custodic essential |uildings ai “Recentl raffiti off t if Southsid Incidents lil ot that are Green s£ wkward — Science. The project is National Science Foundation toem students to explore and reach theirai tial. regardless of gender or race Lack of gender equity results ft® way people are raised by their para the prescribed gender roles that tht taught, said Dr. Jeff Froyd. directoro demic development in CoUcg Engineering and the project direc NSF Foundation Coalition. “I hope students begin to seethau equity is not a simple issue." Froyd 1 Key allies back decision to suspend oil deliver to North Korea for secret nuclear program NEW YORK (AP) — Key U.S. allies late Thursday backed a Bush administration decision to suspend oil deliveries to North Korea as punishment for its secret nuclear program. The decision was announced after a day-long meeting of the four parties that operate the 8-year-old oil assis tance program — Japan, South Korea, the European Union and the United States. The allies coupled the sus pension with a condemnation of North Korea for violating a 1994 agreement with the United States and its treaty obligations to remain nuclear-free. They also warned that North Korea’s future relations with the four parties “hinge on the complete and permanent elimination of its nuclear weapons program.’’ President Bush made the decision to suspend oil ship ments Wednesday night, ahead of Thursday’s meeting of the four members of the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, known as KEDO, which runs the program. A statement from KEDO’s executive board said the suspen sion would begin with the December shipment and “future shipments will depend on North Korea’s concrete and credible actions to dismantle completely its highly enriched uranium program.” “In this Tight, other KEDO activities with North Korea will be reviewed,’’ said the statement read by South Korean Ambassador Sun-Sup Chang, who chairs the board. At the White House, senior administration officials cele brated their allies’ agreement to “condemn” the North Koreans outright and unequiv ocally demand immediate elimination — “not steps to begin elimination,” noted one of the officials — of Pyongyang’s nuclear program. The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, also underscored the KEDO member countries' threat to cancel other interaction beyond the oil pro gram, including economic aid and construction projects. KEDO was founded after North Korea signed an agree ment with the United States in 1994 pledging to become a nuclear weapons-free state. In exchange, the United States promised to provide more than 500,000 tons of heavy oil per year. In at South Korea and Japanofc to pay most of thecosik: light" water nuclear rec that are of limited use is country intent on develif nuclear weapons. The is that project is unknown Bush decided to su# oil shipments follow: 13 Korea's acknowledge month that it was secreil;®] oping a uranium-based: His only concession agree to allow a vessel - en route to North Koreato er what would be the las oil shipment unless Pyon? decides to dismantle itsnwj weapons program. The four KEDO y condemned North ® nuclear weapons prop® demanded that it be elm 11111 ' |ng - exper “I didn’t lears ago v ■ was witne murder of ; ing a stude he student Green s jKujawa, w dieved tc later disco a man whe I A typic predictabh arly and 1 “A typi al staff be iusually fo until abou has been £ Green ! Satchel BBQ 8 at Northgate Daily Lunch Specials Come see for yourself ooooh - great prices 260-8850 BIRKENSTOCKS) Save $$$ Order online at www.clubcloseout.com Where the smart people buy In ob Texas you t past ; Come for Pancakes Iff Delta Delta Delta’s Pancake Breakfast Benefiting St Jude’s Children’s Cancer Research CraftMasters “4 YEAR ROUND ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW 1 865 Briarcrest Drive • Bryan • Afif'ir Items • Needlecraft • Stained 6lass ^Tgniino^ P • Floral Arrangements • Woodcrafts • Pottery • ^ • Wearable Art • Jewelry • Aggie Commemorative We "ve Moved Aggies • .. . . Mon.-Sal. Come visit us at our Thurs. new location in the Fall Hours Sim. 1 776-1 same shopping center! Stop by and get that perfect gift for any otrasi^ Nox Saturday November 16, 2002 9-11 am @ the Tri Delta House— 1503 Olympia Way Ticket prices: $3 in advance $5 at the door VV THE BATTALlONj Jessica Crutcher, Editor in Chief (he f a || and The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through ^^^^idays andffJfaS 5 ters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except ^ posTMASTER- Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, -p, 77843.1111. changes to The Battalion, Texas A&M University, 1111 TAMU, College S . i ver sityintheD ivision L 5 i[>.'' j News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A& McDona |d BuildW Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. 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