8B Thursday, April 15, 2004 P^eatuiHCM Ge*Ue*A> * * * * Of BRAZOS VALLEY FREE PREGNANCY TEST ♦ Pregnancy, Adoption & Abortion Education ♦ Post Abortion Peer Counseling ♦ Adoption, Medical & Community Service Referrals ♦ All Services Free & Confidential ♦ Open M-F 9-5 and some evenings & Saturdays ♦ www.hopepregnancy.org 695-9193 846-1097 205 Brentwood College Station 4001 E. 29th St. #1<)a Bryan University Tire 3818 S. College, Bryan 846-1738 5 Qts. 10-30 Valvoline $ 16 95 Oil & Filter Change Limit one per omomer. Not valid with any other discount or offer. Oil waste fee $2 Meter for Freon Level Test for leaks (freon extra) $ 29 95 Air Conditioner Check Limit one per customer. Not valid with any other discount or offer. Turn Rotors or Drums Pack Bearings when possible New pads or shoes $ 89 95 Front or Rear Brakes Limit one per customer. Not valid with any other discount or offer. $ 49 95 Flush Injectors Limit one per customer. Not valid with any other discount or offer. STA Travel's uuuflilii Be/fc oF /ummer > This ain’t uoun parents' summer vacation. »Gurope The bobal trip: 7 countries....!! days R/T air Co London Prom Los Angeles or New York. $1,355 Conciki's European 1 Magic: an 11-day tour through Belgium. Netherlands, Germany. Austria. Italy, Switzerland and France TRAUEL DATES from LA from NY Apr 01 - Jun 15 Jun 16 - Aug 31 Special Student Airfare: Apr - Jun Jun - Oct London $446 $745 Paris $604 $905 Amsterdam $703 $957 Cheap Sleeps: London - St. Christopher's Village $28/nlght Paris - Aloha Hostel $34/night Rail: Eurail Flaxipass (10 days in 2 months) $488 Eurailpass (15 days) $414 »fiu/bralia (one! neui Zealand) Oz GKplorer: Sudneu to Cairns s s your uuay Air to Sydney Prom Los Angeles or New York, return Prom Prom Cairns. OZ Experience Cobber 3}1 250 Bus Pass: a Flexible hop-on/hop-oPP pass Prom Sydney to Cairns For travel up to 12 months. TRAUEL DATES from LA from NY Apr 01 - Jun 19 Jun 20 - Jul 20 Special Student Airfare: Apr - Jun Jun - Oct Auckland $1344 $1174 Sydney $1425 $1312 Melbourne $1425 $1312 Cheap Sleeps: Auckland - Central Backpackers $16/night Sydney - Wake Upl Hostel $23/night Melbourne - Bakpak Hotel $25/nlght Cairns - Gllligon's Hotel & Resort $20/night »fldvenbure Best oP Peru 9 days oP Inca & R/T air to Lima fTIOChU PlchlJ R/T air to Lima Prom Los Angeles or New York. Tucan Travel's Peruvian Trails: a 9-day exploration oP the Incan Empire and the Famous Inca Trail. $1,595 TRAVEL DATES from LA from NY Apr 01 - Jun 30 Jul 01 - Aug 15 Special Student Airfare: Apr - Jun Jun - Oct San Jose $397 $397 Bangkok $916 $1066 Cape Town $1377 $1560 Cheap Sleeps: San Jose - Pangea Hostel $14/nlghd Bangkok - Viengtoi Hotel $K>/nlght Cape Town - Ashanti Lodge..... $14/nlght Santiago - La Casa Rojo $8/nlght lftt$fti*tioft»l ttwiest Idcnitty C**d The airfare listed on the right side of this advertisement are for departure from Austin. The packages on the left of this advertisement are accessible from your local metro area but the rates will be more or less than these advertised prices. Check with your local STA store for rates departing from your local metro area. All fares are Subject to change and availability. Taxes and other applicable fees are not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Fares are valid for students and youth under 26. ISIC/IYTC card may be required. Check out our "Besd oP Summer" and "Let's Go" brochures 4341 University Way NE (206) 633.5000 424 Broadway Ave. East (206) 329.4567 STA TRAVEL www.statravel.com onunc » on THEPnonG »> on enmpu/ » on tug /trggt THE BATTAll Study: Test-tube multiple births declinin By Jeff Bonn THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BOSTON — A worrisome national surge in multiple births linked to test-tube technology is easing, largely because doc tors are implanting fewer embryos during each attempt to make a woman pregnant, a study suggests. Doctors routinely place sev eral embryos in the womb at once to improve the odds of pro ducing a baby. Technical advances and the advent of professional guide lines appear to have led to more sparing use of embryos, the study’s researchers reported in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. The findings are likely to stoke the debate over whether the government should put a cap on the number of embryos that can be used for each attempt. "It’s so rapidly evolving that, to put it in the hands of legisla tion, is clearly to temper and limit progress,” said Dr. Robert Rebar, director of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. "The guidelines are working.” Researchers at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital analyzed federal data on in-vitro fertilization cases in which women had their own eggs fer tilized with sperm in the labora tory and then had them implant ed. The technique accounts for the vast majority of laboratory- assisted fertility procedures. The average number of embryos implanted per attempt dropped from four to three between 1995 to 2001, the last year of federal data. In the last five of those years, triplets and greater multiple pregnancies fell from 11 percent to 7 percent of all in-vitro pregnancies. The rate of twins held steady among in- vitro pregnancies, and actually rose among all births in the gen eral population. Many doctors and parents-to- be hope to avoid multiple births, especially triplets or higher. Such babies are often bom dangerous ly premature and underweight. Such pregnancies can also raise the risk of bleeding, high blood pressure and other complications in mothers. In addition, children from multiple births impose dif ficult personal and financial bur dens on families. The 7-year-old voluntary guidelines issued by fertility spe cialists recommend two to five embryos per in-vitro attempt. In recent years, doctors have been able to cut down the num ber of embryos per attempt with improved drug regimens for get ting women to produce eggs, more skillful methods of fertil- ization, and better cultures for growing embryos. Even with the reduction in the average number of embryos used, the success rate for in-vitro attempts rose from 20 percent to 27 percent from 1995 to 2001. “It took a while, I think, for physician practice to catch up with the results of our own tech niques. All of a sudden, it’s working really, really well,” said Pamela Madsen, director of the parent-supporting American Infertility Association. She is mother of two single-birth chil dren by in-vitro fertilization. Many countries have limited the number of embryos to two to four per attempt. So far. the United States has left the deci sion up to doctors and parents. The Boston researchers said the findings show that the volun tary guidelines are working and Test tubes beaii fewer triplets Efforts to reverse the surgs] multiple births to womer j use assisted reproductive I technology are working, I because doctors are impte; fewer embryos. Pregnancies with three or more fetuses In women using assisted reproductive technology 12 percent 10 i4r- 1997 1998 1999 2000; dATTHE 1ADDC SOURCE New England Journal of Medicine llic federal law is not nee trol multiple births. The sttith's senior air/ j Mark Hornstein, sits executive council of the Soil for Assisted Reprodic Technology. It co-publi^J professional guidelines. NEWS IN BRIEF Bush endorses Israel’s retention of parts of the West Bank in break from U.S. policy Arafat earlier called the idea "the complete end of the peace proa And Palestinian Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat said of Bush's stair "This is like someone giving a part of Texas' land to China." moi for sti week, limous would grade d core :lish or ing to admir rove th Ion. Th( sson in he nev a of "si base( |d rathe WASHINGTON (AP) — In a historic policy shift. President Bush on Thursday endorsed Israel’s plan to hold on to part of the West Bank in any final peace settlement with the Palestinians. Bush also ruled out Palestinian refugees returning to Israel, bringing strong criticism from the Palestinians. An elated Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said his plan to pull back from parts of the West Bank and Gaza, hailed by Bush, would create "a new and better reality for the state of Israel." But Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia — with whom the Bush administration deals while boycotting leader Yasser Arafat — called Bush "the first president who has legitimized the (Israeli) settlements in Palestinian territories.” "We as Palestinians reject that," Qureia said. Ten years later, South Africans still loyi] to party that toppled apartheid JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - An elderly woman wrappedr colors of the governing African National Congress spoke for million:I lined up Wednesday to vote in South Africa's third all-race national! "The ANC held our hand and brought us through Noluthando Nokwando, a 66-year-old woman from the squalid I Town township of Khayelitsha. "We can give them a chance-an! respect - for another five years." Despite lingering poverty, high unemployment and an AiusCfs;| debt of gratitude to the party that toppled apartheid a decade holds sway in South Africa. he of “s (willing (lasses i bb-dow sociall peed. USD ti cribed t APRIL iway: ^s comp truth i bate atx Ise of ac them ii ktcorrec IHISD o 19 24k- :Ada I respon. Monday, April 19 4—5 pmOpening Reception Faculty Club, 11th Floor Ruddar Towar speaker: Dr. James Anderson, the Vice President and Associate Provost Cor Institutional Assessment and Diversity international Oradtuata Studant Association 5—7 pm Emperor's Pot — Cultural Simulation Rudder T o w m r 401 8am Houston Stata Univarslty, studant» on a Quant for Unity and Oivarsity 7:30 pm "Mr- & Mrs. Iyer Evans Library, room 204 E India Association and tba L.T. Jord Movie inatltuta for ZntarnatIonai Awaran* Tuesday,. April 20 9 : 30-10 : 30 am The Ugly Truth - Art Display, Movie, & Discussion Library Annex 410 r « s Uapartmant Noon—1 pm Navajo Blues Performance Rudder Fountain Mr. blackhoraa Mitchell — Caribbean Studant Association 5:30—9pm Allies Advance With pre-reg 1»tration only. For further information refer to the web site 7—8:30 pm Reflections of a Native American Author on Literature and Cultural Integrity Evans Library, room 204 E Hr. Blaokhorsn Mlt.oh.il and Carlbb.an Scud.nc Anaoalaelon Wednesday, April 21 11 am-l pm A Beautiful Mind: One Man's Struggle with an Invisible Disability - Movie & Discussion Evans Library, room 204 E S.rvlc.s for stud.nt.with D1 a.t>l 11.1 l.a 3—5:30 pm Jim in Bold - Movie and Panel Discussion Library Annex 410 Dr. Patrick Slattnry * sAPE (8tudnnts and Faculty for Equity in Education) Thursday, April 22 11:30 am—1 pm The Fairer Sex — Movie and Discussion Evans Library, room 204 E women's Center and Multicultural Services 5-6:30 pm Race, the Power of an Illusion - Movie and Moderated Discussion Evans Library, room 204 E Multicultural ftaxivicaf 7 pm The Holocaust Through the Soldier’s Eye: A Tale of A Survivor Rudder Tower 301 tamo hixi.l fcek Hild Ind wha |. He di a box some |ct on h ipaign. Fi therm ttie randy t ip in his Ich that |k, this i 3 few years ■ pulling Friday, April 23 12 — 1 pm The Experience — International Concert Rudder Fountain Aqqie international Amhaaaadora ?avin i respon hat pari id, Mr. I Jg our i fatness ci president kjhas ma Davis beliei (or y on one 1 in this Bches of ^ most ce into the gre Jask yoi iericans answer is B soldier v unwa 1 continues °nly empo perican i 5:30—7 pm Albatross simulation Evans Library, room 204 E International Proqraci Participatory role-playing £or Student; Saturday, April 24 UniDiversity Celebration time & venue TBA International Graduate Student Aaaociation For more information visit http://www.tamu.edu/unidiversity