i ©UANTUAA COW TUTORING :2fcO-COWS Northgate next to CD Warehouse, Hrs:2-10pm Sun-Thu. $3.S0/hr for 4 revlews/testl ORGANIC T» il JtIB WifQi » Hmmmm WHCi 8 SiC©SP§ fISXt WSSSl} ORGAHZC & BXOlOGr STVPr PACKCTS/OIP TESTS ft Care Plus , The Good Doc “Fell asleep at a tailgate party, did you ? ” Make tracks to CarePlus Medical Center for all your minor emergencies. Our on-site x-ray facility allows us to treat your accidents and injuries quickly. And no appointment is necessary, so you can come in immediately after an accident. A&M stu dents even receive a 10% discount at CarePlus Medical Center. At CarePlus, you get quality care plus value and convenience. Care Plus 2411 Texas Ave. and Southwest Pkwy • College Station, TX 77840 696-0683 PRESENTS Murder Mystery INVESTIGATE CRIME SCENES! INTERROGATE WITNESSES! CAN YOU CATCH THE CAMPUS KILLER BEFORE HE STRIKES AGAIN? Thursday, November 7 2nd Floor MSC $3/person $5/two person team Crime Scenes Open From 7:00-Midnight Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to inform us of your special needs. We request notification three (3) working days prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our abilities. November 12 ACU'I REGIONAL TOURNAMENTS Hullabaloo Game Court $5 On-Site Registration 6:30-7:00 Tournaments Begin at 7:00 BOWLING November 19 The Battalion Michael Landauer, Editor in Chief Amy Collier, Executive Editor Kendra Rasmussen, City Editor Gretchen Perrenot, Executive Editor Tom Day, Sports Editor Heather Pace, Opinion Editor Stew Milne, Visual Arts Editor Rachel Barry, Aggielife Editor Chris Yung, Web Editor Tiffany Moore, Night News Editor Tim Moog, Photo Editor Helen Clancy, Night News Editor Brad Graeber, Cartoon Editor Staff Members Cmr Desk - Assistant Editor: Ann Marie Hauser; Reporters: Marika Cook, Brandon Hausenfluck, Christie Humphries, Carla Marsh, Melissa Nunnery, Laura Oliveira, Wesley Poston, Erica Roy, Meredith Stewart, Courtney Walker & JoAnne Whittemore Aggielife Desk - Assistant Editor: Libe Goad; Feature Writers: James Francis, Kimber Huff, John LeBas, Aaron Meier, Joseph Novak, April Towery & Shea Wiggins; Page Designer: Michele Chancellor Sports Desk - Assistant Editor: Kristina Buffin; Writers: Jamie Burch, Sara Duesing, Jeremy Furtick, Colby Gaines, Ross Hecox, Matt Mitchell, Dennis Ramirez & Nicole Smith Opinion Desk - Assistant Editor: Erin Fitzgerald; Columnists: Jon Apgar, H. Baxter, David Boldt, Bryan Goodwin, Marcus Goodyear, Shannon Halbrook, Michael Heinroth, Aja Henderson, Jennifer Howard, Mason Jackson, Sean McAlis ter, Chris Miller, David Minor & Jeremy Valdez Night News - Page Designers: Marissa Alanis, Jennifer Bishop, Michele Chancellor & Angie Rodgers Copy Editors - Katie Arnold, Brian Gieselman, Shannon Halbrook, Gina Panzica & Matt Weber Visual Arts Desk - Photographers: Rony Angkriwan, Dave House, Pat James, Rachel Redington & Ryan Rogers; Graph ic Artists: Jenny Maki, James Palmer & James Vineyard; Cartoonists: Michael Depot, Ed Goodwin, Dave Hoffman, John Lemons & Quatro Oakley Web Masters - Terry Butler, Dusty Moer & Tung Tran News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Publi cations, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 013 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: Batt@tamvml.tamu.edu; Internet Address: http://bat-web.tamu.edu. Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For campus, local and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. Mail subscriptions are $20 per semester, $40 per school year and $50 per full year. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Dis cover or American Express, call 845-2611. The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University. Second class postage paid at College Station,TX 77840. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Bat talion, 015 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station,TX 77843-1 111. D The Battalion JLDJllJLrllllT Page] Monday • November 4,19S| ► This day in history ► State 1 Mon. 11/4 227: 4*6pra & 8*10pm Quiz Review. O’Brien Tue. 11/5 227: 8-10pm Practice Tests; Crow Wed. 11/6 227: 8-10pm Practice Quiz; L*u Thu. 11/7 227: 6-8pm Practice Tests; Tiner (AP) — Today is Monday, Nov. 4, the 309th day of 1996. There are 57 days left in the year. On this date: In 1880, the first cash register was patented by James and John Ritty of Dayton, Ohio. In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleve land was elected to his first term as president, defeating Republican James G. Blaine. In 1922, the entrance to King Tutankhamen’s tomb was discov ered in Egypt. In 1924, Nellie T. Ross of Wyoming was elected the nation’s first female governor to serve out the remaining term of her late hus band, William B. Ross. In 1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president, defeating Democrat Adlai Stevenson. In 1980, Ronald Reagan won the White House as he defeated Presi dent Carter by a strong margin. In 1995, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by a right-wing Israeli minutes after at tending a festive peace rally. Rabin, 73, was a war hero who had be come one of the Jewish state’s fore most architects of peace. Five years ago: Ronald Reagan opened his presidential library in Simi Valley, Calif., with a dedication ceremony attended by President Bush and former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon — the first-ever gathering of five U.S. chief executives. Prairie View vows to win Sunrayce PRAIRIE VIEW, Texas (AP) — Prairie View A&M engineering stu dents don’t want to hear “nice try.” In last year’s national solar-pow ered car race, Prairie View A&M was outspent, out-designed and outrun. The 48 students building the Sun- panther II vow 1997 will be different. “No one is out of reach for us,” said project leader Edwin Lloyd, a 23-year-old senior from Dallas. “We can do it.” This time around, Prairie View A&M promises to win. “We’re not going just to finish in the top three,” said DeLeon Ben nett, 22, of Houston. But winning next summer’s Indi- anapolis-to-Colorado Springs “sun- car" race will be a tall order. In the most recent of the bienni al Sunrayce contest, Prairie View A&M finished 36th in a field of 38. The university’s Sunpanther I was the only Texas entrant in the race won by the Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology. The Prairie View team was slapped with an eight-hour time penalty because Sunpanther I ar rived in Indianapolis with batteries that didn’t conform to rules. The goal of the 10-day, 1,200- mile race is to foster teamwork and raise interest in advanced technology. The car with the lowest cumulative time wins. In June, Sunpanther II faces en tries from leading schools such as MIT, Purdue University and Califor nia Polytechnic Institute at Pomona, not to mention Texas A&M, Prairie View A&M’s big broth er to the north. About 70 cars al ready are vying for 40 race slots. In August 1995, state officia; promised to reduce that rateinre sponse to local outrage over ft county getting a disproportionati share of paroled sex offenders. But there are only 25 fewer se offenders in the area since theruri Eixti- iosby ! torse t Tarrant County leads state in sex offenders FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — De spite a state promise to curtail the number of paroled sex offenders sent to Tarrant County, the area still leads Texas in the percentage of rapists and molesters imported from other counties. The county is home to 253 paroled sex offenders, slightly more than half of whom were shipped in from other counties across the state. the ratio of non-resident to reside' offenders has actually gone up sin September 1995, when 163 offer ers were from Tarrant County 115 from elsewhere. Although “there has been an fort dnd I think the numbers hi gotten better ... the truth is, Ta| rant County, and particularly Fo Worth, continue to have a dispr; portionately large number of the; offenders," said city council mei ber Bill Meadows. Of the 253 sex offenders in (1139^ jf you’r county as of Wednesday, 128 con c'osby. mitted their crimes in another pc' Cosby wa of the state, while 125 committa n perfec their attacks here, accordingl ;omedic if nc statistics kept by the Texas Ot equestrian partment of Criminal Justice, form as NEW YORI iractice to g ow do you quare Gai len? Horse ► Weather Today Tonight Tomorrow ► Today’s birthdays Former CBS news anchorman Walter Cronkite is 80. Actor Art Car ney is 78. Rhythm-and-blues singer Harry Elston (Friends of Distinction) is 58. Blues singer Delbert McClin- ton is 56. Actress Markie Post is 46. Country singer-musician Van Stephenson (BlackHawk) is 43. Pi anist Yanni is 42. Rock singer-musi cian Chris Difford (Squeeze) is 42. Actor Ralph Macchio is 34. h Other counties with high percelentered th< ages of imported offenders incluo arena at thi Harris County with 41 percent,[ National Paso County with 33 percent, Dais Jorse Show County with 24 percent and Be>; ng racing gre County with 15 percent. With a di aression am sides, Cosby urday as he ring aboard f a very patie , 1 aged a coupl JilOdys ExpectedBigi the crowd be 75°F Ibled to a stoi With the ci I <_>n.igb t’ s Expected It* Cosby slowly Highs & Lows 60°F Tomorrow’s Expected High Partly cloudy with a slight chance of rain. Partly cloudy with a slight chance of rain. Partly cloudy with a slight chance of rain. 80°1 Tomorrow Nights duced his co- Expected Low Jello Pudding. 64oF Seinfeh painstakingly the horse’s b; “That was of my life,” Cc nally reached Then, like finds ke YOU Can Help AO Make a difference by donating your teddy bears and other stuffed animals at Alpha Phi’s Teddy Bear Drive WHY? Alpha Phi is collecting teddy bears from the community to give to the boys and girls in pediatrics at St. Joseph’s Hospital. WHEN? This week"--November 5, 6, and 7 (Tuesday, Wednes day, and Thursday) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. WHERE? Bring your bears by the AO table in the MSC or drop them in the designated box at Randall's on University Dr. H MSC Unlverfcty Register now! Call 845-1631 Beginning C & W Dance Starts Mon. Nov. 4 • 6:15-7:30 pm Stained Glass II Starts Wed- Nov. 13 6.-9 pm Ballroom Dance Starts Tries. Nov. 5 • 6-7:15 pm Wedding Boquets Wed. Nov. 20, 27 • 6-9 pm Latin Ballroom Dance Starts Wed. Nov. 6 • 7:30-9 pm Beginning Pottery Wheel Throwing Starts M/W Nov. 4 • 5:30-7:30 pm LOS ANGE Stiller doesn’1 ring a bell, si lis comedic g Stiller, who pered, bellow on NBC’s Sein knows what 1 show's writers felt like time I get a c 69-year-old ac T find out Defensive Driving Section B: M/T Nov. 4, 5 • 6:30-9:30pm Section C: M/T Dec. 2, 3 • 6:30-9:30pm Call 845-l 631 • Mon - Fri 12 noon character five go on the set Intermediate Pottery Wheel Throwing like Costanza' Starts M/W Nov. 4 • 7:45-9:45 pm 10 pm • Fri-Sat 12 noon - 5 pm Just for the FUN of it! Floppy Joe's Computer Store Is Your One Stop Computer Shop! Hardware: • The Latest Technology • New Systems or Upgrades • Service and Installation • Technical Advice Software: • CD ROM Rentals • All of the Latest Games • Clip Art and Flow Charts • Presentation Software • Resume Programs sion with TV ( speak fluent k Before the sold hot dog: ind made 3( Tie Ed Su///v wife, comedia Iso acted on “I never leg ny skills, like bought it was iy stupidity, 0 ess, that i le ittle things brc tatema lulimia FREE ° ne Year Membership ■*“ with this coupon or any service. Expires 12-31-96 Expires 1705 Texas Avenue in Culpepper Plaza 693-1706 http: / / www.cs-floppyjoes.com Open every night until 9 p.m. NEW YORI Bateman sat nade her bec< The forme said she ma hr herself, can hav< TOUGHNESS COMMITMENT LEADERSHIP A graduate of the University of Texas School of Law, Joe Cannon has practiced law in Central Texas for 36 years. During these years, Joe has established an extraordinary record of commitment and leadership... A Lifetime of Service to the community Joe Cannon has been a leader in the “Now You Are 18” program, educating kids about the legal system and what awaits them in our jails if they cross the law. JOE CANNON Family man, neighbor, member of the community Joe has also stepped in to help assure that everyone is treated fairly by the courts, regardless of income. He was elected to the Pro Bono College of the State Bar of Texas for his extensive contributions of service to Central Texas low income families. Hands-on courtroom experience An experienced courtroom lawyer, Joe has tried hundreds of cases before juries and has been lead counsel in more than 25 cases before the 10th Court of Appeals in Waco. As a prosecutor, the courage to get results Joe Cannon was one of two attorneys appointed as Special Prosecutor to try a member of the Texas mafia. Joe got the job done as the jury came back with the death sentence. It’s that type of commitment and courage that has earned Joe Cannon the endorsements of 11 out of the 13 District Attorneys in the 10th District Court of Appeals. Joe was married for 33 years to Alice Jean Sundberg, who died in 1993. He is proud of their two children, JoAl Cannon-Sheridan, a Baylor Law School graduate now practicing in Cherokee County, and Thure Cannon, a graduate student at the University of Texas L.B.J. School of Public Affairs in Austin. go throw Jpan have this _ ater,” she sai :ion of TV Gi Tiainly about sating when I ng more tha and then tryinj Bateman s People knew they’d say, ‘Y ’d take it as t The 30-yea starring on NE Badly, said sh (ears ago ant 12-step progrt “One day 1 ; (ou know?” st Joe has always been actively involved in the affairs of his com munity. He has worked with young people as a Little League Coach and Umpire, and as an Assistant Scout Master. Joe served as President of the Groesbeck Lions Club, and is a member of both the Groesbeck and Mexia Chambers of Commerce He was also a trustee of the Mexia I.S.D. School Board for five years, and is a Ruling Elder and Sunday School teacher at the First Presbyterian church of Mexia. Soap st or anot Vote For JOE CANNON FOR CHIEF JUSTICE lOTH COURT OF APPEALS NEW YORI about pulling and bowing oi time Emmy ra says if nominal think Car five-time Emm; said in Sunday’ That’s not the run. If you hav< you deserve tc other. The way gwork is giving o Slezak has tress award fo live and has c< 16-time nomine