D The Battalion l? 13 0 T 17 17 T IV 1L 13 IV 1 JLi 1; 111 \y Eating Early Raylene Mercer, Special to The Battauon Mike Meadors, a senior engineering technology major, grabs a breakfast burrito at the Bus Stop Snack Bar on the way to class. ► This day in history Today is Thursday, April 24, the 114th day of 1997. There are 251 days left in the year. On this date: In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La Marseil laise,†was composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle, an officer stationed in Strasbourg. In 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing the Li brary of Congress in Washington, D.C. In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States after rejecting America’s ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba. In 1915, the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the brutal mass deportation of Armenians during World War I. In 1916, some 1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin, includ ing the General Post Office. The rising was put down by British forces several days later. In 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill was knight ed by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace. In 1968, leftist students at Columbia University in New York City began a weeklong occupation of several campus buildings. In 1970, the People’s Republic of China launched its first satellite, which kept transmitting a song, “The East is Red.†In 1990, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Cape Canaveral, Ra., carrying the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope. ► Today's birthdays Critic Stanley Kauffmann is 81. Actress Shirley MacLaine is 63. Author Sue Grafton is 57. Actress-singer-director Bar bra Streisand is 55. Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley is 55. Country singer Richard Sterban (The Oak Ridge Boys) is 54. Rock musician Doug Clifford (Creedence Clearwater Revival) is 52. Actor-playwright Eric Bogosian is 44. Actor Michael O’Keefe is 42. Rock musician Billy Gould (Faith No More) is 34. Rock musician Patty Schemel (Hole) is 30. Here kitty, kitty — DNA from ca hair leads to murder conviction NEWYORK (AP)—Here is an odd tale from the annals of DNA evidence in the courtroom: A Canadian man was convicted of murder after hairs in a bloodstained jacket were genetically matched to his parents’ cat. The man lived with his parents and Snowball, a white American shorthair. The case, reported in Thursday’s issue of the journal Nature, is one of the few times that nonhuman DNA has been used this way in a murder trial. The murdered woman was 32 when she disap peared from her home on Prince Edward Island in 1994. Her body was found in a shallow grave a few months later, and police suspected her former com mon-law husband. By then, the brown leather jacket had been discov ered, stuffed in a plastic bag and left in the woods. Tests showed the bloodstains belonged to the woman. The cat hairs were found in the lining. Police re called seeing Snowball at the man’s home during their investigation. They sent a blood sample from Snowball and hair from the jacket to Stephen J. O’Brien of the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Md. O’Brien has studied cat genetics for 20 years. O’Brien and colleagues report in Nature that Snow- ► Weather Today Tonight Partly cloudy with a Partly cloudy with vari- chance of thunder- able winds, storms. ball’s DNA matched genetic material from (lit: one of the hairs. To help O’Brien compute the likelihoodthaii match would occur by chance, the Royal Can Mounted Police had a local veterinarian drawl randomly from 19 cats. O’Brien studied DNAki samples, plus data from a prior surveyofninecais the United States. The likelihood that the jacket hair DNA« match Snowball’s DNA just by chance wascon| at about 1 in 45 million. The suspect was convicted of second-degret der last July, and the DNA evidence was “a rnaju tributing factor,†said Cpl. Phonse MacNeili Mounties in Summerside, Prince Edward Island Nonhuman DNA evidence has been usedbei murder cases. In Arizona in 1993, a man wasconj after DNA from seed pods in his pickup Inni matched to a palo verde tree at the site whereil tim’s body was found. Edgar Espinoza, deputy director of the govern National Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratoni land, Ore., said he had heard of another caseim hairs on a blanket that wrapped a murdervici matched by DNA to a suspect’s dog. i Tomorrow Mostly sunny with light wind. Italy Study Abroad Spring "97 - in Castigiiion Fiorentino A&TS 3SO: Arts and CtvWz&tion The Nation’s a ryTr; cT course JUST GOT EVEN Kaplan’s Expert Instructors teach you how to master every question on the MCAT. HEAD START CLASS BEGINS APRIL 27th ! • Personalized Study Plans • Over 105 hours in class • Over 500 practice passages • Over 36 years of MCAT experience • The perfect balance of content and strategy KAPLAN 1 -800-KAP-TEST www.kaplan.com *MCAT is a registered trademark of the Association of American Medical Colleges AGGIE RING ORDERS THE ASSOCIATION OF FORMER STUDENTS CLAYTON W. WILLIAMS, JR. ALUMNI CENTER DEADLINE: April 24, 1997 Undergraduate Student Requirements: 1. You must be a degree seeking student and have a total of 95 credit hours reflected on the Texas A&M University Student Information Management System. (A passed course, which is repeated and passed, cannot count as additional credit hours.) 2. 30 credit hours must have been completed in residence at Texas A&M University, providing that prior to January 1,1994, you were registered at Texas A&M University and successfully com pleted a fall/spring semester or summer term (I and II or 10 weeks) as a full-time student in good standing (as defined in the University catalog). 60 credit hours must have been completed in residence at Texas A&M University if your first semester at Texas A&M University was January 1994 or thereafter, or if you do not qualify under the successful semester requirement. Should your degree be conferred with less than 60 res ident credits, this requirement will be waived after your degree is posted on the Student Information Management System. 3. You must have a 21) cumulative GPR at Texas A&M University. 4. You must be in good standing with the University, including no registration or transcript blocks for past due fees, loans, parking tickets, returned checks, etc: Graduate Student Requirements If you are a May 1997 degree candidate and you do not have an Aggie ring from a prior degree, you may place an order after you meet the following requirements: 1. Your degree is conferred and posted on the Texas A&M University Student Information Management System; and 2. You are in good standing with the University, including no registration or transcript blocks for past due fees, loans, parking tickets, returned checks, etc. If you have completed afl of your degree requirements and can obtain a “Letter of Completion†from the Office of Graduate Studies, the original letter of completion, with the seal, may be presented to the Ring Office in lieu of your degree being posted. Procedure To Order A Ring: 1. If you meet all of the above requirements, you must visit the Ring Office no later than Thursday, April 24, 1997 to complete the application for eligibility verification. 2. If your application is approved and you wish to receive your ring on June 12, 1997, you must return and pay in full by cash, check, money order, or your personal Visa or Mastercard (with your name imprinted) no later than April 25, 1997. Men’s 10K - $307.00 14K - $418.00 Women’s 10K - $176.00 14K - $203.00 Add $8.00 for Class of ‘96 or before. The ring delivery date is June 12, 1997. LOOKING FOR A GREAT JOB THIS SUMMER? the 12TH MAN FOUNDATION is NOW HIRING FOR POSITIONS IN ITS 1997 TELEMARKETING CAMPAIGN 4 Earn $5.50 per Hour Plus Bonuses 4 Looks Great On Your Resume 4 Flexible Hours 4 Help Support Texas A&M and Aggie Athletics Please pick up an application and schedule interview in the 12th Man Foundation Office, Room 109 of the Koldus Building before Friday, May 2, 1997 •fflTHMJlil Ijbffillvlnll Rachel Barry, Edtor in Chief Tiffany Moore, Managing Editor Kristina Buffin, Sports Editor Wesley Poston, (Mom Stew Milne, Visual Arts Editor Alex Walters, Opinion Eui | John LeBas, Aggieufe Editor Chris Stevens, Web Edik Jody Holley, Night News Editor Tim Moog, Photo Editor Helen Clancy, Night News Editor Brad Graeber, CartoonE Staff Members City Desk - Assistant Editor: Melissa Nunnery; Reporters: Rebecca Torrellas, Brandon Hausenfluck, Laura Olweiia,®* I Roy, Graham Harvey, Jackie Vratil, Benjamin Cheng, Shikonya Cureton, Joey Schlueter, Kathleen Strickland, Alanis & Shea Wiggins Aggieufe Desk - Assistant Editor: April Towery; Feature Writers: Aaron Meier, Shea Wiggins, Michael SchaubJ Phillips, Brandon Truitt, Missy Price, & Karen Janes: Page Designers: Artie Alvarado & Daphne Phillips Sports Desk - Assistant Editor: Paul Mitchell; Writers: Jamie Burch, Jeremy Furtick, Matt Mitchell, CourtneyLions^fj Ramirez, Chris Ferrell, Lara Zuehlke & Nicole Smith; Page Designer: Eric Proctor - Opinion Desk - Assistant Editor: James Francis; Columnists: Jon Apgar, David Boldt, Mason Jackson, Stephen Hill, Donny Ferguson, Kate Shropshire, Dave Johnston, Glenn Janik, General Franklin, Robby Ray, CouitneyPI# s | John Lemmons, Brandon Hausenfluck, Travis Chow & Jeremy Valdez Night News - Page Designers: Jennifer Bishop, Angie Rodgers, Joshua Miller, Lisa Wells & Michele Chancellor Copy Editors - Elisa Douglass, Missy Davila, Shea Wiggins, Gina Panzica & Matt Weber Visual Arts Desk - Assistant Photo Editor: Dave House; Photographers: RonyAngkriwan, Patrick James, Derek Dsi* 1 | Robert McKay, Ryan Rogers & Amy Dunlap; Graphic Artists; Jennifer Maki, James Palmer & JamesVineyartC^I ists: Michael Depot, Chad Mallam, David Hoffman, John Lemons, Ed Goodwin & Quatro Oakley Webmasters - Dusty Moer, Sara Candy, David Friesenhahn & Daniel Holwerda News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of! cations, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 013 Reed McDonald Building. Newoo«r| 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: B3tt@tamvml.tamu.edu; Internet Address: http://bat-web.tamu.e<iu. Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For cai#| cal and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertisiir are in' 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m, to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-26?!^ Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick upas, ion. Mail subscriptions are $20 per semester, $40 per school year and $50 per full year.To charge by Visa, Card, Discover or American Express, call 845-2611. The Bahalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and springsemesteispj Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) atTaS^j University. 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