Universal Computer Systems, Inc. http://www.ucs-systems.com UCS will be holding an Information Session for Graduating Seniors Tuesday, October 14th from 3pm - 6pm At the College Station Hilton on University Drive. To attend, please R.S.V.P. through the Career Center. Representatives will be on hand to discuss career opportunities available for Houston and College Station. Positions available include: Software Support Outside Sales Regional Systems Consultants Programming For more information, visit our website or call I-800-883-3031 UCS Hires Non-Tobacco Users Only E.O.E A*A AmericanAirlines® You are cordially invited to discuss career opportunities at American Airlines Employer Briefing/Reception Date: October 16, 1 997 Location: 404 Rudder Time: 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. (Refreshments will be provided) Representatives from Airport Resources will be there to discuss challenging career opportunities with American Airlines u www-nri jn**r Visit our web site: http://www. howdyags. com SCIENCE SUN Oct 12 MON Oct 13 TUE Oct 14 WED Oct 15 THU Oct 16 PHYS 1 ! 4-6 ’ TEST 1 TEST 2 TEST 3 201 PM REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW PHYS 6-8 CH CH CH PRAC 218 PM 6 7 8 TEST CHEM 101 8-10 CH CH CH PRAC DRSMOTEKA-TESr BE>FORD PM 6 7 8 TEST CHEM 102 10 PM- CH CH CH PRAC DR PECK MID 17 18A 18B TEST BUSINESS SUN Oct 12 MON Oct 13 TUE Oct 14 WED Oct 15 THU Oct 16 FINC 4-6 PART PART PART PART 341 PM 1 2 3 4 ACCT 6-8 TEST 1 TEST 2 230 PM REVIEW REVIEW ACCT 6-8 KEEP UP CH 8 CH 8 229 PM WITH CLASS PART 1 PART 2 IF NEEDED BANA 8-10 PART PART PART 303 PM 1 2 3 FINC 10 PM- PART PART PART PART 4 341 MID 1 2 3 6-8 PM CHECK THE WEB SITE FOR THE MOST UP TO DATE INFORMATION!! S The Battalion •TATE Thursday • October 9, Thursc Military- school cadets charged wilGr attempted murder of fellow studep 1 ’ JL U WASP HARLINGEN, Texas (AP) — Two military school cadets described as exemplary students and respected leaders were charged with at tempted murder Wednesday, accused of slash ing the throat of a fellow cadet in a dorm room. The arrests of Christopher Lee Boze and Je remiah George Jensen, both 17, have stunned officials at the Marine Military Academy and left parents around the country concerned about the safety of their children. “This isn’t something you envision or even contemplate. It’s in the category of your worst nightmare to wake up to something like this,” said Commandant of Cadets Col. Tom Hobbs. The Harlingen Academy has 480 students enrolled in grades eight through 12 from 29 states and several countries. About 16 percent of the students are from Texas. Hobbs said parents from around the nation had been calling the school since learning of the attack. After news of the arrests got out, sev eral parents withdrew their children from the 32-year-old academy. Boze, of nearby Olmito, and Jensen, ofVan- couver, Wash., were arrested Tuesday night on the school’s campus. Boze was released from jail Wednesday on $100,000 bond. Jensen re main imprisoned in lieu of the same bond. The senior cadets are accused of slashing the throat of another senior, Gabriel Cortez, around 3 a.m. Monday in the Company B bar racks. According to police, Cortez, 18, was awak ened by someone climbing on top of him. He then felt pressure on his neck and yelled out. His assailants fled as other cadets burst into the room to see what had happened. Cortez was transported to a local hospital, where he received 28 stitches. Police spent Monday and Tuesday interviewing cadets and school officials. Although Cortez told them he was unable to identify his attackers be cause the room was dark, several witnesses iden tified Boze and Jensen as the men they saw fleeing, said Harlingen police Lt. E. Leal. “Other witnesses identified them as the at tackers,” Leal said. Neither Boze’s attorney nor his mother re turned telephone messages from the Associat ed Press. Authorities did not know whether “This isn’t something you envision or even contemplate. It’s in the category of your worst nightmare to wake up to something like this.” COL. TOM HOBBS COMMANDANT OF CADETS Jensen had hired an attorney, and a telephone number for his parents could not be obtained. Police said they were still searching for a motive in the attack. School officials declined to speculate on a possible motive and said Cortez told them he knew of no reason for the attack. “That’s the million-dollar question,” said Hobbs. “You look at the individuals and you say why, but there’s nothing that jumps out.” School spokesman Robert Beckley said there is little connecting Cortez with Boze and Jensen. They all lived in the same two-story barracks, along with about 65 other students. Cortez lived on the top floor with an eighth- grade cadet, while Boze and Jensen shared a room on the first floor. Cortez’s roommate was asleep in the top bunk bed when Cortez was at tacked in the lower bunk, Beckley said. Cortez, Boze and Jensen all were rnerlp 11 Gre of Bravo Company, one of eight such Job tim the school. Cortez, a student at the acadeft i n fl‘ 3 1/2 years, had joined Bravo last mon emerge, i switching over from another company to aim fo What puzzles school officials most help cus er, are the seemingly spotless backgro. slowdow Boze and Jensen. g| Greer Both were squad leaders within Brav Budget ( pany, meaning they supervised sever deficits i cadets, said Beckley, adding that Cor due large not in either of their squads. has exc< Boze, a corporal who spent all buthii hut he sa year at the academy, had good grades! > Hesai almost spotless military record. He wr the great recognized for exemplary conduct, mea hi its sev earned no demerits during two schoolBj Greer something Beckley called a rarity. ment, v\ During the 1993 school year, he was down to as a cadet of the month. A clarinet play acentur also was recognized for his participatic time i school band. Bin, he Jensen, also a corporal, came to theafc “To be my on a full scholarship and consA^nsify a: earned A’s and B’s. Beckley called ln fv but promising student, person, cadet" who ?h ains c pirations for a career in the MarineCo ma rks. “ School officials have increased seciL# een re f campus in an attempt to reassure cor out P ace parents. However, they described thea Question an isolated incident. Bh escai “This is the only thing of this naturei^ fuder ever had at the academy,” said BecWej$P ance 1 have your usual fistfights and typicaltr® 1 ? 10 cc roughhousing, but nothing like this.’’ B rmanc The students, meanwhile, are goinyil tailin g 1 their daily business. Some have metwiB j an y selors, but most are preparing forThifi 1 )l ' night’s football game and next weeks T Cortez, who remains in the campussicif 11 1 expected to return to classes in afewd: | preparer “A re-< Governor Bush to pardon Houston mat,. Court hearing validates DNA evidence proving prisoner not guilty of1985 nr trial underwent testingthiss. future of and failed to match Byrd’s DNA the Sup i AUSTIN (AP) — A Houston man who served 12 years in prison for rape but later was cleared by DNA tests will be par doned, Gov. George W. Bush said Wednesday. Bush said a court Gov. G.W. Bush a court hearing in Houston validated the new DNA ev idence and that he would sign the pardon for Kevin James Byrd. “As soon as we get the paperwork in, he’s pardoned. That would be to day,” Bush said. State District Judge Doug Shaver determined “that DNA evidence was properly handled and tested in the Byrd case, and secondly that based on this new evidence, Kevin Byrd is innocent of sexual assault,” Bush said. Byrd, 36, was released from prison July 30 after serving 12 years. In asking for a pardon, he said, “I think I’ve been through enough.” Backing his request were the judge who oversaw his 1985 trial and tlie Harris County district attorney’s office that prosecuted him. Bush had insisted that a court re view the DNA tests as a procedure is established for cases in which such new evidence is found. “This case is the first of many that we expect to see during the next several years as DNA evidence is more widely used to review con victions,” Bush said. “It is absolutely essential to es tablish a proper procedure and precedent to handle these cases that ensures that both victims and defendants are granted due process, and that courts of law will review the validity of evidence be fore it is acted upon by a governor,” he said. Byrd was serving five years proba tion for a Bay City burglary when a 25- year-old Houston woman told police he was the man who raped her. From the outset, the case was shaky. The alleged victim, eight months pregnant at the time, told police she was raped while lying in bed, her 2-year-old sleeping be side her. She told police it was a white man who raped her. Four months later, after seeing Byrd, a black man, in a grocery store, she told police he was the attacker. Semen samples kept from his 1985 Bush said it was importlvigorous proceed cautiously in a case At issue ing with what he called "thi broadca: science” of DNA evidence. Hi exclude he doesn’t believe Texans /they spo want him or any governorcc Richa mining the fate of defencJArkdnsas without court review. lohave v “No one would wantmeasipeech r ernor to convict an individualtfro a deba on evidence which had neve® a must reviewed by a court, and 1 wig “Editc willing to overturn a jury’st^fential e based on evidence which 1 ed as the now, had not been reviewtTwith qu< court,” Bush said. [commen “Governors can’t be actifii “Just t side the courts ...Thepropc caster do for a governor is to be a got tice Ant not a judge.” rThere a [aster ca Ladies 0 rBs JL j o-o BRIDAL OUTLETS DESIGNER BRIDAL & BRIDESMAIDS FACTORY DIRECT TO YOU! 15% TO 70% OFF At the Texas Ave. Entrance of A&M Open Weeknights until 7 p.m., Saturday until 5 p.m. 764-8289 LEARN TO We’re now located at College Station Easterwood Learn to fly the Cessna Pilot Center Exclusive Integu: Flight Training System at United Flight Systems, the experienced flight school. P Justic dered ah Employe dates get distinctl ways losi Soute might be ■•gate fc tion.” 1 A fed< against t] Private thru advanced training Aircraft rental, Pilot Shop F.A.A. approved 141 school VA Eligible Benefits United Flight Systems,Iij Easterwood Airporl| College Station, H| 409 260-6321i ZPi/l! IGW./ ills I mMtjr ■ Get-Your-Picture Made-For-The Yearbook Day. M rm t "V ' Class of ’98 pictures are being made for the t-'l: Aggieland at A R Photography ■ ■ -. Texas Avenue I iii TAMU Campus Igjji siflf iSf wpWWwifps'is* !i i ■' ii . ; ' 1410 Texas Ave. (between Jason’s Deli and Academy) Drop by A R Photograph at its new location on Texas Avenue, of call 693-8183 fo your appointmel Cus • Re • Bei 5 76 4 c 3 6o