(software exchange) 104 COLLEGE MflIN @ NORTHGfiTE IN CS. TX 846-1763 WE BUY. SELL & "RENT" NEW & USED HRRDWfiRE & SOFTWARE SPECIAL: -6X CD-ROM $259 00 ■486DX4-120 Fully Loaded with MM-Kit $1365°° A K Meet at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, November 20th inside the Zachary Bldg, at the stairs. For more info contact the OCA office at 845-0688 ^mmnnnm IK APARTMENT LOCATOR FOR GRADUATING AND CO'OPING AGS SPECIALIZING IN: METROPLEX (Dallas, Ft. Worth, and Denton) HOUSTON SAN ANTONIO Receive a Benjamin Knox Print free with Successful placement with lease of six months or longer. BEINIAMIIN KINOX GALLERY For more info, please contact: Alan Miller ‘91 (409)-260-9860 or for outside the B/CS area 1-800-AGGIE-91 (1-800-244-4391) Located at 505 University, Suite 803E directly behind the Fox and the Hound. Appointments preferred, but not required. Walk-ins gladly accepted Thursday-Saturday 10-6 Except during Sat. of t.u. game E-MAIL: AGLAUNCH @ AOL.COM RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN’S NDE THE MUSICAL MUSIC BY RICHARD RODGERS BOOK AND LYRICS BY OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II Sunday, November 19 3:00 p.m. & 8:00 p.m. Rudder Auditorium Tickets are on sale at the MSC Box Office-TAMU, or charge by phone at 845-1234. New extended Box Office hours include Sat. 10:00 a.m. to 2:00p.m. Now accepting Aggie Bucks™ Opera Soattj Page 2 • The Battalion State Friday • November 17, Death chamber renovations complett in time for new execution witnesses □ The new procedures could take effect as early as Dec. 1. HUNTSVILLE (AP) — The Texas death chamber has a new look which makes it ready for relatives of a murder victim to watch their loved one’s killer be put to death. Continuing a tradition that started more than 77 years ago when inmates first built the death house at the Walls Unit in downtown Huntsville, Texas prisoners have erected a wall down the center of the death chamber, cutting the viewing area into two separate rooms each less than 6 feet wide. “We sat down and decided about all we could do is divide the room in half,” Neill Hodges, the assistant warden at the prison, said Thursday. One room will hold witnesses selected by the convicted mur derer. The room on the other side of the wall will house rela tives of the murder victim. Under procedures to be ap proved Friday by the Texas Board of Criminal Justice at a meeting in Dallas, up to five rel atives of a murder victim will be able to witness the execution of their loved one’s killer. The Texas Board of Criminal Justice ordered the rules draft ed after hearing testimony from victims’ family members who urged that relatives be given such an option. The new procedures could take effect as early as Dec. 1, depending on what the board does Friday. The renovation required some air conditioning changes, addi tion of a second speaker so peo ple in both rooms can hear the inmate’s final comments, and new carpeting. Also, a blind was placed over the window through which the ex ecutioner watches the inmate. Of ficials determined the shade was needed because the mirror sur face of the one-way glass window allowed people standing on either side of the chamber wall to see each other in the reflection. Hodges estimated the work, which took about a week to com plete, cost about $2,000. Under the neto policy, as many as five “close relatives the deceased” could witness execution. Those relatives defined as a spouse, parent stepparent, or adult brother, ter, child or stepchild. At the prison director’s dis tion, another individual close relationship to the could be a witness. And if fen than five relatives of the vie wish to attend, relatives of an* er victim for whose killing the mate was convicted could atta They’ll join in the de; chamber up to five relatives friends designated by the inm as personal witnesses. Also the chamber are up to fivene media witnesses, a chapla criminal justice board memln and prison staff. Fr No 1 Just what the doctor ordered: Dr Pepper fan writes book about the bubbly beverage □ Author Jeffrey L. Rodengen spent two years researching his favorite soft drink. WACO (AP) — There is no prune juice in Dr Pepper. Exploding that long-lived myth was the most interesting thing author Jeffrey L. Ro- dengon says he learned while writing his book about the legendary soft drink. ’ On Saturday, Rodengen will visit Waco, where Dr Pepper was first formulated in 1885 by pharmacist Charles Alderton, to sign copies of his book, “The Legend of Dr Pepper/Seven-Up.” A devoted Dr Pepper drinker, Rodengen has spent the last two years traveling the country researching and collecting photographs about Dr Pepper and Seven-Up for his book. “It is absolutely my favorite soft drink,” Rodengen said Wednesday, sipping a home made Dr Pepper at the Dr Pepper Museum. During his research, he spent countless hours with museum officials collecting facts about the origin of the drink and about the history of Waco. “I was drinking Dr Pepper long before it was cool,” he said. Rodengen, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., is a nationally syndicated columnist, producer, director and industrial historian who has written hundreds of articles chronicling American technology and industry. “The Leg end of Dr Pepper/Seven-Up” is his 14th book. "I was drinking Dr Pepper long before it was cool/' —Jefftry L. Rodengen author, “The Legend of Dr Pepper/Seven-Up’' The book covers the time from when the two soft drinks were formulated until their recent purchase by Cadbury Beverages. But Rodengen said it focuses on Dr Pep per because it has a more interesting and longer history. “I had no idea Dr Pepper was invented in Waco when I first started,” Rodengen said. “The book includes how Dr Pepper grew from a regional to a national favorite.” The book contains reproductions of many original photographs of. Waco from the 1800s and more recent photos of the museum. “Ohis is a lovely book that brings the his tory of 1 Jr Pepper up to date,” said Mild) O. “Milly” Walker, curator of collections the Dr Pepper Museum. “This is a veryrai able book. It does not read like a calendar.' Walker said Rodengen’s hook is these: ond that has been written about Dr Peps in the 1970s, author Harry Ellis wroOT Pepper: King of Beverages,” which was: dated in 1985 for the 100th annivr. • | celebration of the drink’s invention. Rodengen said although he is onh:* moting the book in Texas, he expects it»i also be a best seller out of state. Rodengen will have two more books before Christmas about the history of Be gs & Stratton, a company that makes smij engines, and Ingersoll-Rand, a constru: tion/mining company. But neither of them will be as fun writing “The History of Dr Pepper/Sevet Up,” Rodengen said. Pointing to his drink, he said, “All th: is is a little flavoring and carbonatedw ter. It’s not like writing about enginesc nuclear submarines.” i Editor's note: The author of this story; Mick Brinkmann, was a 1994 graduate of Text A&M and a former Battalion city editor. Texas leaders consider all their workers 'essential □ Many senators and congressmen are keeping their staff while fighting budget battles. WASHINGTON (AP) — The government shutdown that has sent some 800,000 federal workers home on forced leave appears to be do ing little to trim the staffs of Texans in Congress. Few in Texas’ 32-member congressional delegation have felt the need to furlough their own Washington and district workers as the budgetary battle between the White House and GOP-led Congress drags on. Rep. Steve Stockman, a freshman Republican from Friendswood, is going further than most of his colleagues on Capitol Hill. While furloughed employees are expected to be paid at some point for their enforced holiday, 10 of Stockman’s staffers have been placed on leave without pay. And, Stockman himself has pledged to donate an as-yet unspecified portion of his $133,600 congressional salary to a Houston homeless shelter. “It was important for our staff and for Congressman Stockman to convey to the federal employees that we understand what’s happen ing and that this affects us too,” press secretary Jennifer Murray said Thursday. “We had a meeting here and decided it was important for us to show that we are serious about balancing the budget and that this is more than just a war of words,” she added. The two Texans in the House Republican leadership are taking a different tack, arguing that during the shutdown their staffs are important to furlough. “In light of the fact we are in a leadership office and we are try to reopen the government, we felt as though we needed everyf here to make sure we could effectively do that,” said Tony spokesman for House Majority Whip Tom DeLay of Sugar Land. A spokesman for House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Irvij said his boss is of a similar mindset. “The entire Armey teamisli at work,” said spokesman Jim Wilkinson. “To have a constituent of ours go one single day without avoic their federal government is not a thing we can accept,” he ac Rep. Chet Edwards, who is in the Democratic leadership, shuttered his two district offices and placed nine full-time worlf on furlough, arguing that anything less would be hypocritical. “I believe this budget deadlock is completely unnecessary, Waco lawmaker said. “However, until it is resolved, I think iU be hypocritical for members of Congress to be fully staffed while, erans, Social Security and other federal employees are furloughe Republican Sens. Phil Gramm and Kay Bailey Hutchison ha furloughed any of their employees, their press secretaries said. Neither has Rep. Henry Bonilla, R-San Antonio. “I think that Henry’s view is that in this time we are getting a calls, a lot of questions from our constituents wondering howthisi; ing to affect them,” said Bonilla spokeswoman Allison Griffin. "A wants to have people here to help them with their requests.” I < v v-, ^ ~ _ r ^ A ’ : ' I -1|| - «!!§ji»S!fi 1 919 Harvey Rd. 764-DAVE WtOre Always RaHtnsit 211 University Carter Creek Ctr. 326 Geo. Bush Dr. 268-DAVE mi 846-DAVE f 696-DAVE Medium one Topping Pizza & 2 Large Cokes OR Dozen . , , . . http://www msc.tamu.edu/ . msc/opas/opas.mmi ’ ■ s -A opas@tarrHj.edu f l > ersfens’vvfllTtftdt)ilitie?pl^>d5e cdt 845:8903 to inform us of your special needs. We request (3V notification three (3) working days prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our ability TJULGATERS or LARGER GR0 Pick Up A PARTY PACK Large one Topping Pizza Dozen ^e/vtOHC 16 Buffalo Wings The Battalion GreTCHEN PerRENOT, CityEditp Jody Holley, Night News Edith 1 Stacy Stanton, night News e* Michael Landauer, AGciEiiFErt Nick Georgandis, SportsEnrrot Editorial Staff Rob Clark, editor in Chief STERLING Hayman, Managing Editqr Stew Milne, photo Editor Kyle Littlefield, Opinion Editor Staff Members City Desk - Assistant Editor: Wes Swift; Reporters: lames Bernsen, Courtney Walker, Tara" son, Melissa Keerins, Kasie Byers, Michelle Lyons, Lori Young, Lily Aguilar, Heatte Lisa Johnson & Leslie New. 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