The Battalion classified ADVERTISING • Easy Affordable • Effective For More Information, call 845-0569 THE NAIL STATION "College Station's hottest, new nail salon." OPENING SPECIALS: Full Set $ 25 00 Fills $ 15 00 315 B Dominik 696-6016 BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE will conduct an information session and answer questions about the medical school here Thursday, November 11, 1993 7:00 p.m. - Koldus Building - Room 111 Come meet the Senior Associate Dean and former A&M students currently at Baylor fiESTAURAMT Buy one entree and get ONE OF EQUAL OR LESS VALUE FREE! To be used Sun. - Thur. 5-9 pm Please present to waiter when ordering Expires Nov. 15 Jose’s ZARAPE New Location Restaurante 268-0036 779-8702 3824 S. Texas Ave. 308 N. Main 1 mile North University Dr. Downtown Bryan SPECIAL OFFER - $2.50 with this ad! Advance or at the door. are A JSjGH A R S IOT !!! The Comedy Club 8 PM- 10 PM 1/2 price Pile Drivers Tickets $4. in advance, $5. at the door Listen to KTSR for more details. XCOLLEGE STATION HILTON and Conference Center at 801 University Drive East, College Station, Texas 77840 409/693-7500 GREEK WEEK 1993 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS NOVEMBER 10 - 14 WEDNESDAY BANNER CONTEST & ALL-GREEK PICNIC 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. RUDDER FOUNTAIN THURSDAY FACULTY BREAKFAST 8:00 - 9:30 a.m. MSC FORSYTHE GALLERY FRIDAY ALL-GREEK GAMES & PHILANTHROPY 3:00 - 6:00 p.m. DUNCAN FIELD SATURDAY TEXAS A&M beats the hell outta Louisville ALL-GREEK LETTER DAY AGGIE GREEKS FORMALLY DONATE TO THE JOHN J. KOLDUS ENDOWMENT FOR THE BETTERMENT OF STUDENT LIFE SUNDAY AWARDS BANQUET 7:00 p.m. HILTON HOTEL Page 12 The Battalion Thursday, November 11,: Husband acquitted of marital sexual assault The Associated Press MANASSAS, Va - John Bob bitt, whose wife cut off his penis in retaliation for alleged sexual abuse, was acquitted Wednesday of rap ing her. The jury rejected the argu ment that she "struck out at the very thing that harmed her." Bobbitt's wife, Lorena, will be tried on Nov. 29 on a malicious wounding charge. She faces up to 20 years in prison, as her husband had on a charge of marital sexual assault. The jury of nine women and three men deliberated about four hours before returning the verdict. Bobbitt, 26, jumped from his chair and hugged his lawyer, Gre- "Why did she cut his penis off? Something happened and I submit to you something sexu al happened that offended her and drove her over the edge." - Paul B. Ebert, prosecutor gory Murphy, then buried his face in Murphy's shoulder as Bobbitt's aunt shouted, "Oh Lord, thank you!" Mrs. Bobbitt, 24, wasn't in court. In closing arguments, the prose cution and defense focused on in consistencies in the couple's stories of what happened the night of June 23. "Why did she cut his penis off? Something happened and I submit to you something sexual happened that offended her and drove her over the edge," prosecutor Paul B. Ebert said. She "struck out at the very thing that harmed her, the thing that hurt and she severed it," Ebert said. Mrs. Bobbitt testified that her husband woke her, pinned her to their bed, yanked off her under wear and raped her. Bobbitt testified that he initiated sex and his wife didn't resist. 1 phy said Mrs. Bobbitt concocted a story of sexual abuse because she was angry over the dissolution of their four-year marriage. "The prosecution tells you that two wrongs don't make a right, Well, that's right," Murphy told the jury. "The emasculation of John Bobbitt is the first wrong. The sec ond wrong is the fabrication of facts in this case." After cutting off her husband's penis, Mrs. Bobbitt said, she their apartment and threw the sev ered organ out her car window Police found it in the grass and it was reattached in a nine-hour oj> eration. Traditions Continued from Page 1 Battalion a week ago criticizing the builders of Bonfire in his hall, As ton Hall, for yelling, banging on residents' doors, playing loud mu sic and striking a flagpole with an ax handle outside of Aston Hall. White said this is a clear exam ple of violating the rules. "It seems cut and dry to me," he said. "It's against regulations." Dr. Malon Southerland, interim assistant vice president for student services, said students should ad here to the University policies. "If the policy is in the Depart ment of Student Affairs guide for residence halls, then it should be followed," Southerland said. But Damon Flowers, a Bonfire crew chief from Aston Hall, said Bonfire should be an exception to the rule. "He (White) has a point that ax handles and loud noise in the hall is forbidden," said Flowers, a ju nior biomedical science major. "That violates policy. "But I also believe there's a time and a place when we are not caus ing harm to him or anyone else." Chris Thompson, president of the Residence Hall Association and a senior industrial engineering ma jor, said policies are overlooked be cause Bonfire is such an important Aggie tradition. "But if it starts to turn it into a negative thing, then we should re think it," he said. The resident director and the resident advisers of the hall usually tolerate the wake-up procedures, he said. "The yellow pots have to go to the resident director, and the resi dent director will approve it as long as he doesn't receive com plaints," he said. Each hall has one yellow pot who leads that hall at Bonfire and four or five crew chiefs who orga nize the hall's Bonfire effort. Rusty Thompson, an adviser for the yellow pots and coordinator of Residence Life for the north side, said the yellow pots and the resi dent directors get together at the beginning of the semester and es tablish the guidelines for wakeup calls. "The resident directors encour age the yellow pots to knock only on the doors of the guys who want to go," Rusty Thompson said. This policy works well at first, but then people start to see what they can get away with. Rusty Thompson said. Bob Wiatt, director of the Uni versity Police Department, said UPD has received at least one call every weekend since Bonfire cut began. "We've tried to address these complaints and asked them to calm it down," Wiatt said. "But some times their exuberance takes over and they don't know how loud it carries. Wiatt said UPD has received fewer complaints this year than in previous years. Chris Thompson said the wake- up calls have gotten a lot less outra geous since he came to A&M four years ago when an ambulance siren was once used to wake up cadets in the Corps. "But it's getting a lot stricter now," he said. "But if we didn't make noise, it wouldn't get built." But, White said, a lot of the "good bull" that goes along with Bonfire has stopped. Since White s letter was pub lished in The Battalion, he said he has been harassed both verbally and physically. "A guy screamed at me and hung up,he said. "And last week, in the middle of the night, some body took some shaving cream and drew a pentagram on my door." White said someone also left a cup of urine outside of his door so he would knock it over when he walked out. "It's sort of scary when they can come by whenever they want," he said. "I'm surprised the administra tion hasn't done anything about it." White said he received some support, however, after the last in cidents. "After that, people started to come by, and they were amazed," he said. "They said'These guys are barbarians.'" White said he is surprised that he has gotten such little support from students and the administra tion. White said he hoped his letter would cause the University to look into this practice. "I was hoping it would be calm ly disarmed, but they seem rather arrogant about it, like they are not going to be stopped," White said. Dockery Continued from Page 1 ery said in an April 16 letter to then-Athletic Director John David Crow. Dockery, however, re-entered his proposal after he received from "within the Texas A&M sys tem, as well as from the Texas A&M Board of Regents." "(These calls) have asked reconsider simply because offidaii behind the program believe thai Dockery Mouse L’ublishing has tlx concept and ideas that can gener ate the most money for the Athletk Department," a letter dated 28 from Dockery to Dave South, assistant athletic director for mat keting, stated. During the time of Dockery 1 ; absence, the remaining membersol the team that made the original proposal, KWL Consulting Co put together another proposal ex eluding Dockery. KWL was vet bally assured they had received th contract on April 27 with their ne« proposal, but the next day Docker re-entered the bidding and wi awarded the contract. Dockery, a former yell leads was once banned from associate with A&M athletics because of ai cusations that in 1988 he imprope ly supplied former Aggie quarts back Ke ' ’ ' Cevin Murray witl dng c That involvement led, in part, a job at his printing compam cream on 1 NCAA probation for A&M an urine left Dockery s disassociation from lit Tu aco i • athletic program. |inese kir Thursday, I jULI PHILLI DAVE THO/ BELINDA Bl MACK HAR! Som< Althoug what make some peop Bonfire peatedly h Aston Hall t ter to The ing about made in weekend people up Chad V threatening tagram d DON’T GET LEFT B E HIND suede “Flushed, feverish, and high-strung, Suede is simply divine.” - Spin “Suede does more in 11 songs than The Smiths did in two albums.’’- Musician The self-titled debut album featuring The Orowners Metal Mickey, and stop. App been no p the perpel victim is c The Re book state sive force wake up E not permi include, b banging a oud steri saws, etc.' In spiti yellow pi continue students' minutes, s I ' W—M—■ ' mWfU ~ ' "COOL RUNNINGS’’ CYPRESS HILL "BUCK SUNDAY’’ -v.-; riddim heavy soundtrack from a heavy-duty movie, featuring Wild Wild Life from Wailing Souls, Jimmy Cliffs hit I Can See Clearly New, plus the riddims of Tiger, Diana King, Worl-A-Giri, Tony Rebel, and Super Cat. is “Black Sunday’’ and the never-before commercially-availabie, SWEET RELIEF- A BENEFIT FOR VICTORIA WILLIAMS" JAMIR0QUAI “EMERGENCY ON PUNET EARTH” 'J&rnirocfuai I The new album of uncompromising power from Australia’s greatest natural resource Featuring ImgMiOJ, My Country, and Fourteen extraordinary artists on one extraordinary album. Featuring performances by Lou Reed. Soul Asylum, Maria McKee, and many more. Peace-seeking music inspired by soul. Jamiroquai (pronounced Jam-lro-Kwai), "Emergency On Planet Earth," the debut album featuring When You Ganna Learn (Digeridnn) •Columbia* Reg U S Pat & Tm Off Marca Registrada; cmam and Chaos design are trademarks of Sony Music Entertainment lne,/(& 1993 Sony Music Entertainment Inc “Cool Runnings* ■ Motion Picture Photography & Artwork Title.© 1993 The Walt Disney Company, All Rights Reserved marooned 110 College Main CD'S Tapes LP's 846-0017 Rem Please day to re vicemen have ser ultimate Fren agaii