Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1995)
'30,1 5 ; onday • January 30, 1995 "pm: 3A r rAi.iON The Battalion • Page 3 Stick By Alvaro «? AFTER. Ijji ABDOC.T«£.D BY A ATURt. FROM AMOTHt-PC , ^Yica AWD HI5 N£U £14 FRl£MO YXA'JE. A VeRY ’0R.^WT ; TO Ot THC LeADER. OF TH£ iel lieeu. FRon th£ FY AU6YIW .WHCRC'HC-S 6 HELD Wo«>TA«.*: BY THt ASC ifcoAS YOU BETTER TAKE A LA5tK C.UN WITH YoU F to j :— I D0WT NEEP iT|j Ipg ( a nd x 6or vou ! y Drtor the saw ! T GOT THIS 17 to^BE The Inkwell By Brad (\l>VENTURES IN AC.UIEUVND WELL, XT WAS SUITE .. -EKEfsIO,..AMD X DIDN’T GET i MUCH DON£ AS X HAP PUAPlWFD .’NATCH. ..BUT X txD GET OUT AND VIS IT FRIENDS, DRINK, WATCH SOME TV. .AND ALLTHE NORMAL STUFF. rJ0,No,TVi fikIE!...i habbanth HATH -MUSCHHHH TOO^ TO D*<mTKTHH...X'M SompcetelY COBER. - anSkoticeh .. SO NOW X HAVE TO cor'E of WITH SOME CARTOOHS FOR THIS WEEX,... AND NO. I’M NOT GOING TO STOOP TO COPYING AND RECYCLING OLD "TL/euLARMAN” ALL-8EER"TNEME COMICS TO TRY TO RALLY CAMPUS SPlR/T AND STUFF. IT’S BECOMING INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT TO COME UP WITH cartoons reflecting Good bull STORIES OF THE CORPS AND THE CAMPOS BECAUSE ,lslOW THAT A few People have discovered my true identity (boon, gasp, real piFFiaci ^igWc^ H task ' mERe X x find'that everyone’5 LtcrSiopTue>oi-<HAwj All Divimg out of my WAY And STUFF TO AVOID eeiNG PUT >N FAY COMIC ■ UERt COMES THE \ 'STntures IXSCLMMERTrtiMG: NOW ITi ALL RIGHT TO WANT TO FOLCOW AND WANT TO BE LIKE FAR. CARD IN ALE/rwe CARTOONIST WHO DREW TUBULARMAN,...BUTITHlNK , the legendary Battle between 'ruses' AND "BEVO MAN” IS STILLTDO FRESH I IN THE MINOS OF SOME SOPHOMORES, I JUNIORS, AND SENIORS To BE DOING, MANYn’M A SUPERHERO WHO NEEDS BEER'cARTooMS. By Quatro sp )N'T YOU O'US'r LOVE i,DATING NEW PEOPLE? >U GET TO HAVE MEAN ||G> FVL CONVERSAT-IODs) WITH THEM-.- YOU GET TO MEET THEIR INTERESTING FRIENDS. ■■ THIS XS ALVIS. HE'S AN IDIOT - SAVANT. ITT ARE YOU THINKING jHT THIS minute?... I'M JUST VVONIDERIN& ^lOVV MUCH LONGER XT': DOING TO TAKE UNTIL. ALCOHOU KICKS Xr E CAN BO" THIRTEEN NOSE HAIRS. YEAH , DEFINITELY THIRTEEN HIT CCCCCfr ir <THE SACK. i: Weather ildini: take for sti u cai ling ii ^ lostly cloudy with widely jurpo: ■ic dri ng )ol pfijSijt YOU GET TO MEET THEIR Parents. .. DID WE MENTION THAT our lovely an&ela is OUR ONLY CHILD.AND that we cherish EVERY THING SHE DOES? . GREAT. 1 THEN YOU'LL REALLY BE THRILLED .WHEN X TELL YOU THAT ' SHE'S - PR.E&PVANT ? AND YOU GET TO LEARN 'HEIR DISGUSTING LITTLE HABITS.. ■ OH YEAH .THAT'S ANOTHER THING... THE BATHROOM'LL GET YOU SICK IF YOU STAY IN THERE FOR LONG ER THAN TWO MINUTES... Today pattered light rain. High around 7. Northwest winds 5-10 mph. mi Tonight Partly cloudy then clearing late. Low of 35. Northwest winds 5-10 mph. Tuesday Mostly sunny with a high near 63. Southwest winds 5-10 mph. -m \Jt d Y \ Tuesday Night Clear with a low near 33. Light winds. Wednesday Mostly sunny. High near 67. Source - A&M Chapter of the American Meteorological Society Possible sanction against defense in Simpson trial LOS ANGELES (AP) — The opening statement by O.J. Simp son’s lawyer has had more stops and starts than some space shot countdowns. Johnnie Cochran Jr. has yet to finish his remarks to the jury, and now the prosecution wants him to take back some of his words — stuff the cat back in the bag. Unring the bell. His misdeed was to mention witnesses and evidence not shared with the other side as re quired by law. The most recent halt came Wednesday, and Judge Lance Ito is expected to rule Mon day on possible sanctions against the defense. Is unringing the bell possible? What will jurors think about this? And did the defense lose ground? Cochran, a master showman, probably gained an advantage, some experts say. As they sit out the latest delay in their hotel rooms, the se questered jurors have had plenty of time to think about Cochran’s themes — that the killers are on the loose and the prosecution is obsessed with convicting Simp son, lawyer Gigi Gordon says. “The defense should be order ing up champagne toasts,” she said. “This delay left jurors with Johnnie Cochran’s words ringing in their ears.” UCLA law professor Peter Arenella agrees, but only to a point. “Opening statements are ex tremely important for creating a mindset for jurors,” Arenella said. “On the other hand, whatever mindset the jurors come out of opening statements with can change if the actual evidence doesn’t support the mindset.” As for whether jurors can real ly erase statements a judge or ders stricken from the record, Arenella says it’s unlikely, but it may not matter. “If in fact at trial a witness does not appear or credibility is destroyed, Cochran’s opening statements will make little differ ence,” Arenella said. Deputy District Attorney Mar cia Clark said in court Thursday that whether it’s possible to erase memory or not, the effort to do so is vital to a fair trial. The TV audience may be more concerned about the gaps in pro ceedings than the jurors. Insulat ed as they are, it’s unlikely jurors know about the fight over the de fense’s admitted discovery viola tion. Neither would they know that prosecutor William Hodg- man was hospitalized Wednesday night complaining of chest pains. He is now resting at home and ex pected back in court this week. Indeed, the 12 jurors and 10 alternates must be getting the idea that their role is to hurry up and wait. They checked into a hotel Jan. 11. A hearing on domestic abuse evidence was held without them and, except for brief quizzes by Ito on what Simpson headlines or rumors they might have seen or heard, they weren’t brought to court for a week and a half. Last Monday, more arguments delayed opening statements and kept the jurors out of court. Final ly Tuesday they heard from pros ecutors Clark and Christopher Darden, who introduced them to tales of wife battering and humili ation and traced a trail of blood from the crime scene to Simpson’s property. Bottom Line? Ljoux (VaLntinz (znooj (zour j-o^ ondtj $70. urLtfi an ad. on ^l/aCEntins. i ^J^Oaijl Q/aCznUns -JdouE. -JdinEi. cvi[C(js. jj-U^Cii-fiEd in tfi£ Hd)atta(?Lon on ^ZJusiLday, < \J'E[jxua T iij l/j-tfi. ^Jo jodaciE Ljoux -J2oue. ^/dins. oomz (jy loom OJfj in tfzz Kzfdzzd crdV^cdddOonadd d3[dcj. d^zaddins. Li. < \Jztjxuazy JOtfi. i-hu COUPON SAVE $32 I I I I I I I I I I 1 CarePlus J Dental Centers L. — _ Exp. 02-19-95 — —I On Routine Cleaning, X-Rays and Exam (Regularly $81, With Coupon $49) | Payment must be made at time of service. ■ BRYAN COLLEGE STATION J Jim Arents, DDS Dan Lawson, DDS Karen Arents, DDS Paul Haines, DDS 1103 Villa Maria Roxane Mlcak, DDS 268-1407 Texas Ave. at SW Pkwy. 696-9578 STUDY ABROAD IN PARIS Paris through its Literature & Architecture May 25 - June 22 (be back in time far second summer session) 6 hrs. Humanities or Architecture History For more information call: J. Golsan 845-7425 SOFTUmRC €XCHANG€ NEW & USED SOFTWARE TRY BEFORE YOU BUY! NOW OPEN! at Northgate behind LOUPOT’S • CASH FOR USED SOFTWARE • SOFTWARE SALES & RENTALS YOUR GAMING HEADQUARTERS 846-1763 10-7 Mon. - Sat. 12-7 Sun. 105 College Main, College Station, Tx 77840 University Bookstores Three off-campus locations Northgate-Culpepper Plaza-Village Presents: WAa% HEWLETT mLfzM PACKARD Graphing,Financial f and Business Caleulators On Sale Now! Graphing Calculators HP-4 8G—$99.9 5 & HP-48CX-$2 1 5.00 Q 3 2K/ 1 2 8K RAM memory for complex problem solving. Q 4 8GX has 2 expansion ports. Business/ Financial Calculators HP-lOB—$2<L9 5 □ Economical Business Calculator HP-1 7BII_$82.00 Sc HP-lAlBII-SiaD.^S I I Advanced Financial Calculators for Real Estate, Banking, Finance BREAKING BARRIERS THROUGH COMMUNICATIONS A career development conference for women Saturday, February 25, 1995 TAMU Chemistry Building Hosted by: Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) Sponsored by: • The Vice President for Research and Association Provost for Graduate Studies • The Colleges of Science, Geoscience, Vetemary Medicine and Engineering • The departments of Chemistry, Physics and Women Studies • GTE For more information call 845-8015 or e-mail magnussen©chemvx.tamu.edu TL+ ‘TUTCTRJOfg 260-2660 Mon. Jan. 30 Tues. Jan.31 Wed. Feb. 1 Thurs Feb. 2 3 - 5 PM CHEM 102 CH 15 CH 15, 16 CH 16 PRAC TEST 5 - 7 PM CHEM 101 CH 2, 3 CH 3, 4 CH 4 PRAC TEST 7 - 9 PM CHEM 102 CH 15 CH 15, 16 CH 16 PRAC TEST 9 - 11 PM CHEM 102 CH 15 CH 15, 16 CH 16 PRAC TEST 11 PM - 1 AM PHYS 202 CH 24, 25 CH 26 CH 27 PRAC TEST Phys 218 WILL MEET NEXT WEEK TO PREPARE FOR EXAM #1 Mon. Jan. 30 Tues. Jan. 31 Wed. Feb. 1 Thurs Feb. 2 5 - 7 PM PHYS 219 CH 23A CH 23B CH 24A CH 24B 9 - 11 PM - PHYS 201 CH 1, 2 CH 3, 4 CH 5 PRAC TEST 11 PM - 1 AM PHYS 208 CH 23 CH 24 CH 25 CH 26 Mon. Jan. 30 Tues. Jan. 31 Wed. Feb. 1 Thurs Feb. 2 7 - 9 PM FINC 811 PART 1 PART 2 PART 3 PRAC TEST 9 - 11 PM BANA 303 PART 1 PART 2 PART 3 PRAC TEST 11 PM - 1 AM FINC 811 PART 1 PART 2 PART 3 PRAC TEST Mon. Jan. 30 Tues. Jan.31 Wed. Feb. 1 5 - 7 PM CHEM 222 CH 1 + FORMULAS PRAC TESTS 1 & 2 PRAC TESTS 3 & 4 7-9 PM CHEM 222 CH 1 + FORMULAS PRAC TESTS 1 & 2 PRAC TESTS 3 & 4