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OVKRACTIVE BLADDER RESEARCH STUDY • Female or Male 18 or older; • Symptoms of frequency and urgency. 779-3303 or (888) 779-3303 toll free Medical assessments, study-related diagnostic tests, and study medication arc provided to qualified participants at no charge. ■ Last chance to save! $100 off MCA! Prep Save $100 when you enroll in a Kaplan MOAT course in September/ Classes starting October 9th, January 15th, 22nd & 29th College Station Kaplan Center Enroll today! KAPLAN t -800-KAP-TEST kaptest.com/mcat Test Prep and Admissions *MCAT is a registered trademark of the Association of American Medical Colleges. **0ffer applies only to MCAT Classroom Courses, 15, 25 or 35-hour Private Tutoring Programs and the MCAT Online Course.You must enroll between September 1, 2004 through September 30, 2004. Offer cannot be combined with any other discount,rebate, or promotion. 8 Tuesday, September 28, 2004 NEII THE BATTALIt Cushing Continued from page 1 ■CROSS! CANADIAN ragweed! names because those names were not recorded.” The design for the exhibit be gan in May and finished just in time for the opening. David B. Mellor and the John H. Hinton Endowment provided funding for the event. The exhibit includes the first published account of the expe dition from David B. Mellor’s collection, “A Journal of the Voyage of the Corps of Dis covery,” Published in 1807, the account refers to the journals of Patrick Gass, the chief carpen ter of the expedition. The exhibit also includes a display of C.O. “Pat” Patterson’s private collection of Lewis and Clark material such as contem porary newspaper accounts of the expedition and another im portant published account of the expedition, known as “Biddles Edition,” published in 1814. “If we were to put the jour nals together into a book, crit ics would laugh because the adventures are unbelievable,” Patterson said. Jefferson wanted to publish the journals when the expedi tion ended, so Lewis hired sci entific experts but left out an editor. He was then appointed governor of the Louisiana ter ritory, which included Spanish, French and American tribes that did not get along. Lewis governed the Louisiana terri tory until he committed sui cide in 1809. Clark then hired Nicholas Biddle but by the time he was ready, the War of 1812 broke out, Stumpo said. “It took longer to publish the journals than it took Lewis and Clark to go 3,000 miles and back,” Stumpo said. The exhibit will be open until February 2005. From Monday through Thursday it will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., on Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nights Continued from page 1 Wheelchair Salmon said the request for funding for Aggie Nights tb) student service fees was previously approved, but after the referendum was defeated, the money was taken away. “When the referendum failed, we received a one-timeftiinii of $90,000,” Salmon said. “1 understood that as our responsibi to come up with the funding for the future and keep it going,' It is likely that if Aggie Nights cannot devise a way toga nancial support it may be discontinued next year, Salmons® “As long as students show interest, we at the university committed to this program,” Ford said. On Average, freshmen and graduate students show a gra attendance at Aggie Nights, Ford said. “I am a freshman, so I don’t know a lot of people,” saidii in Dickinson, a freshman computer engineering major. “Ag nights is a great place to meet a lot of people. I try to com often as possible — about once every two weeks.” Aggie Nights is not popular with the majority of studci however. One survey revealed that only about one-sixth ofAi students attend Aggie Nights every semester. Juniors and seniors collectively make up of only half of Aggie Night attendees, while sophomores are the least likely attend the event, making up only 15.2 percent of the total tendance. Only about 30 percent of students who attend Ag nights live on campus. On certain nights, fewer than 300 people attend. Salmon said Aggie Nights is committed to bringing what dents want, and seeks support for funding. “Student service fee advisers will ultimately vote on (f ing),” Salmon said. “My greatest hope is that the students keep it going. Continued from page 1 arthritis, scleroderma and fibromyalgia. The progression of these dis eases eventually caused Rizzo to rely on a wheelchair for mobility. “When I was at A&M I was not in a wheelchair,” Rizzo said. “But I have learned to see life from a different point of view. 1 have learned instead of standing tall, now I sit tall and be counted.” Ms. Wheelchair America provides opportunities for outstanding women in wheelchairs to educate and advocate for individuals with disabilities. Women from all over the country travel to compete in the week long contest, O’Bryant said. “The women (at the pageant) represent the breadth and depth of people with disabilities,” Rizzo said. “They came from various backgrounds. There were athletes, authors, and accomplished public speakers who all brought their various skill sets to the table.” Ms. Wheelchair America is not a beauty pageant, because contestants are judged based on personal and onstage interviews as well as platform speeches, according to the Ms. Wheelchair America Web site. Following her crowning, Rizzo will travel the country speak ing to and advocating for disabled Americans. Her platform is Power through Participation: Illuminating Opportunities for People with Disabilities. “Participation is more than being visible in today’s society,” Rizzo said. “It’s finding your identity through personal contributions to so ciety. I am just helping to change society by giving back.” Rizzo has begun traveling the nation to garner support from leg islatures, businesses and communities for disabled Americans. She appeared at the Miss America Pageant to support the 13 disability related platforms including the winner. Miss Alabama’s. In addi tion, she will appear in Mississippi, New York, South Carolina, Florida and Texas within the next month in hopes of sharing her message. She would also greatly enjoy the opportunity to speak in Aggieland, Rizzo said. “The crown is not the destination,” Rizzo said. “It’s the beginning of an adventure to change the world.” Ivan Continued from page I Hurricane Center said Ivan’s rebirth is not the first; there were some simi lar cases in which tropical cyclones lost their destina tion and then regenerated. Ivan formed in the Atlan tic on Sept. 2, and was one of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history and the woe since Hurricane Floyd !o(i 56 lives in 1999. It has left mess of debris in the Unite States, Caribbean, Grenai Jamaica and the Caymank lands as it went through I various hurricane and tropici storm stages. The damages! the United States wereest mated at between $3 billiu and S6 billion, and stretchd as far north as Penn. (gSMPOD! CINDY MCREYNO COLUMNI! Flores isMUiretF! Bryant to discuss pollen analysis as forensic tool During a time when the focus on security and law enforcement is at an all-time high, Texas A&M anthropology professor Vaughn M. Bryant Jr. believes there is a foren sic tool the United States has all but ignored: pollen analysis. He added A&M is in the position of having the expertise, laboratories and es sential pollen reference collections to conduct forensic research and train students and profession!! this emerging field. In a lecture scheduled ford 5, Bryant will outline theti tory and importance of "foreis palynology" (use of pollen ■“ spore evidence in legal cass and cite examples where poli evidence has played a keyrolf solving crimes. His presentati: “Crime Scene Forensics: li ing Pollen to Catch Murders' Rapists, Thieves and TerrorisS is the topic for the 2004 Fall and sentence Now, death p that this sent' punishment a torturing crir these claims interested in ishment than available evil Lethal inje esthetic and: surgical oper cardiac arrest the anesthetic cedure. How< than that give ologist and T that such a de drugs are adn If anything cause of its C' costs $86 and drugs for the or hanging w As cold as ciety. Philosc of a rule that Marshall Lecture, which f® at 7 p.m. in the Clayton If// Alumni Center. menl stun mar commit murd punishment a Critics of t Compiled from Aggie Daj Is your student organization recognized? Only 4 Pre-Recognition Seminars Left!! For groups that elect officers between April 1 - October 1 Tuesday, September 28 @ 8:30pm Wednesday, September 29 @ 12pm Thursday, September 30 @ 4pm Friday, October 1 @ 5pm Pre-Register online at: http://studentactivities.tamu.edu If you have any questions, please call the Recognition Desk at 845-1133 / jpj***. ^ \ Department of ■mQH Student Activities ' / At Texas A&M University At Texas A&M University Div hot read the fine print. THE BATTA1I0I JONATHAt SMITH CLASSIFIEDS CALL 845-0569 TO PLACE YOUR AD SENIORS. Aggieland yearbook portrait sessions extended by popular demand. Graduation portraits for Texas A&M University's 2005 Aggieland yearbook will be taken through Friday, Oct. 8, in MSC Room 027. There is no sitting fee required to be photographed for the yearbook. To make your appointment, go to www.thorntonstudio.com. Go to Scheduling, then click New User, and complete with Registration Password: tam Or schedule by calling Thornton Studio at 1-800-883-9449, or see the photographer. Aggieland2005 ^ Texas A&M University exposure ' supports the S' 1 : -g state taxes New succe increasing di Columnist academic exc< Unfortunati Texans more i others, yet the tration is worl to make sure t educates ever Y OU CAN STILL HAVE YOUR group's picture taken for Texas A&M's 2005 Aggieland yearbook. Space is limited, so turn in your contracts today. Follow these easy steps: (1) Download a contract from http://aggieland.tamu.edu or pick one up in room 004 Reed McDonald Building. (2) Fill out your contract and return it with payment to room 015 Reed McDonald. Questions? Call 845-2682 for details. Aggielancl2005 1 Texas A&M University [ for more Tex 1 of the A&M i ! the administr I set bolder go; sent types of traditionally ; with the Uni\ j Recently, t istrators at A, pleased to dis the enrollmer for entering s ter represente make-up of tl the Universit; ing minority 1996. This fa were black, a percent of the crease of 26 f were Asian, a percent of the can, an increc The increa: school shoulc Even those w istration’s eff ment should ; instantly bece appreciated b experience w