The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 03, 1998, Image 2

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    2
Et Cetera
School shooting investigation continues
JONESBORO, Ark. (AP) —
At 100 yards, their seven handguns
wouldn’t be terribly effective. Too
hard to hit their moving targets.
But the two boys at the center of
the Jonesboro schoolyard mas
sacre, no strangers to firearms, had
other options at hand, officials say.
Evidence indicates most of the
bullets that felled 15 classmates and
teachers, killing five of them, were
fired from two powerful rifles, stolen
from the younger boy’s grandfather
the morning of the attack.
Fifteen shots came from a repli
ca of the M-l carbine, a famous
weapon carried by U.S. troops in
World War II, Korea and Vietnam.
Five more were fired from a
Remington .30-06 hunting rifle,
able to take down a 200-pound
deer with a single shot from a
quarter mile away.
Both are semiautomatic; the
only limit on firing speed is how
fast a shooter can pull the trigger,
which ejects the spent shell and
chambers a new one in an instant.
Crime lab specialists poring
over the guns expect to deter
mine which weapons killed
Jonesboro arsenal
The weapons police say Mitchell Johnson and Andrew Golden had
following the school shooting in Jonesboro, Ark., included hunting
rifles and hundreds of rounds of amtnuniticn. A lock at some of
the weapons:
Main weapons
Universal .30-caliber M-l carbine semiautomatic
Capacity: Anno clips of various sizes.
Sold with five-shot clip and typically used
with a 15 or 30 shot ammo clip.
Range: Approximately 150 yards
Remington 742, .30-06 caliber semiautomatic
Capacity: Five-shots, using a four-shot
anno clip and one-shot loaded in the
firing chamber.
Range: Up to 1,000 yards
which victims atWestside Middle
School, helping investigators to
make their cases against 13-year-
old Mitchell Johnson and 11-
year-old Andrew Golden.
Yet by one measure, the guns
have already been examined —
and found innocent.
With their considerable fire
power and the carbine’s battle
field origins, such firearms were
considered — but rejected — for
the 1994 federal ban on assault
weapons.
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Continued from Page 1
“Much of the body work and repair is
done in-house to save money,” Jackson
said. “This type of ingenuity is one reason
our buses are still on the road. However,
this will not always be the case. We cannot
continue to keep these buses together with
bailing wire and chewing gum. We must re
place the buses.”
Bus Operations is considering several
options for funding new buses. Capital re
placement, putting spare funds aside an
nually, is one of the proposals for funding a
portion of the new bus fleet. Jackson said
Bus Operations has not had spare money in
the budget for more than four years.
In fiscal year 1998, Bus Operations shows
a difference of $950,000 between budgeted
income and budgeted expenses.
“If everything goes right for the last six
months, we’ll still be about $30,000 in the
red,” Jackson said. “The deficit is made up
with Student Service fees allocated to us
and from revenue from parking facilities
that is transferred to bus operations.”
A second proposal to pay for new buses in
cludes a possible increase in the student ser
vice fee between $35 and $55 for a semester.
Bus Operations reported Fish Camp, Hul
labaloo-North, Center pole and Reveille as
the routes losing the most money each se
mester.
Tommy Muras, a junior business analysis
major, rides the Hullabaloo-North to the
main campus,
He said he hopes his stop is not taken off
the bus route.
“I heard a rumor that Bus Operations is
considering getting rid of the route,” Muras
said. “There are not many people that use the
route but I think that they could possibly al
ter the route.”
Jackson said Bus Operations is still taking
suggestions from students for changes in the
routes beginning next semester.
What's Up
Friday
Alpha Phi Omega: Meet to go visit
Crestview Retirement Home at 6:30
p.m. at Crestview.
Horsemen’s Association: We will
be hosting our annual Aggie Mini
Circuit Quarter Horse Show all at
the Freeman Arena. Call Shannon
at 696-1363 for details.
Bryan-('.ollege ^
pttvpc of laum
/ashbangers is
contest and performancefeaiate sectic
gie Wranglers at lOp.r »r for the bar i
2000. golenty of stud
■®kWhite, a co
What’s Up is a Batta/ioniment, said Was
lists non-profit student ia je fun while I
events and activities. Wmfyji have a satel
submitted no later than tire, n j hts of the v\
vance of the desired rundqtelsaid.
tion deadlines and noticep|uel Garcia, a
events and will not beruni or that hi
If you have any questions ; :. hi ;. mg er S is “all
United Way: There will be a jitterbug the newsroom at 8451313 ; ari ie Bigelow,
Dys the atmospl
it complex
John Collins '97
invites you to...
SMITH FIREARMS/
WICKSON CREEK GUN RANGE
409-764-9230 409-589-1093 (Range)
Located 4.1 Miles East of
Hwy 6 on Hwy 21
MON - FRI Noon - Dark
SAT & SUN 10 a.m.-Dark
Rifle & Pistol Range Skeet Practice
"WE BUY GUNS!!"
m
l MM
*•»*«*>♦»** *»***•*•» <»<«.**»-*•
On sale this week at the
MSC Rudder Box Office
SKEET $4 FOR 25 BIRDS
845-1234 or on the net!
http://boxoffice.taniu.edu
Call lo arrange for special needs.
AggieBucks accepted.
• Fade to Black Dance Ensemble — A Night at the Movies Tue, Apr 14
7:30 p.m.
• Mexican Student Association — Hispanic Music Concert Wed, Apr 15
7:30 p.m.
• Theater Arts - Dancing at Lughnasa Thu, Apr 16 thru Sat, Apr 18
and Wed, Apr 22 thru Fri, Apr 24 8 p.m.
4- MSC Town Hall - MSC Variety Show Fri, Apr 17 7:30 p.m.
• RHA — Casino Fri, Apr 17 7 p.m.
MasterCard
' '
>: » w ii
mmm:
*****«*«*«»*
TAMCM 1 f
Tiffany Inbody, Editor in Chief
Helen Clancy, Copy Chief
Brad Graeber, Visual Arts Editor
Robert Smith, City Editor
Jeremy Furtick, Sports Editor
Jeff Webb, Sports Editor
James Francis, Aggielife Editor
Mandy Cater, Opinion Editor
Ryan Rogers, Photo Editor
Chris Huffines, Radio Producer
Sarah Goldston, Radio Producer
Dusty Moer, Web Editor
Aaron Meier, Night News Editor
News: Hie Battalion news department is managed by students at
Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Publications, 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@unix.tamu.edu; Website: http://battalion.tamu.edu
Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or
endorsement by The Battalion. For campus, local, and national display
advemsing, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569.
Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8
i.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 subscrip
tions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester and
$17.50 for the summer. To chaige by Visa, MasteiCard, Discover, or
American Express, call 845-2611.
The Battauon (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through
Friday during the fall spring semesters and Monday through Thursday
during the summer session (except University holidays and exam peri
ods) at Texas A&M University. Second class postage paid at College
Station, TX 77840. Postmaster: Send address changes to The
Battalion, 015 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX 77843-1111.
Mathematics Contest
Annual Freshmen and Sophomore
Mathematics Contest
Wednesday, April 8, 1998
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Room 317 Milner Hall
snsnsnsn
It is intended to award at least six prizes:
1. $ 150 for paper judged best overall
$ 125 for second place
$100 for third place
$80 for fourth place
$60 for fifth place
$50 for sixth place
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Contest problems will cover topics through Math 152
(Engineering Calculus II) for Freshmen contestants, and through
Math 308 (Differential Equations) for Sophomore contestants.
snsnsnsn
Contact Doug Hensley, e-mail: doug.hensley@math.tamu.edu
or check the Math Dept. Home Page: http://www.math.tamu.edu.
(For purposes of this contest, freshmen are first-year undergraduate
students, and sophomores are second-year undergraduate students.)
Featuring (not limited to)
MSC Visual
Arts Society
Members of
Freudian Slip
The Band-237
^ MSC Town
It’s quiet so we <
rooms can be sc
ye on the launc
Hall gives
you
Vhite said then
ihing clothes at 1
mot get at dorm
‘We have same
l-fold service. PI
attendant, cool
Alashbangers als
Friday, April 3rd at
Rumour’s 8 pm
Need a Job For The 1998 Fall Semester?
Are you a fun person?
Do you enjoy working with kids?
Looking for valuable work experience?
Are you available Mon.-Fri., 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.?
If you answered yes to any of these questions,
we may have a job for you.
>\W>S
College Station
Pmrtta t nmcrmmtJon
Applications are now being accepted for the Kids Klub After School Program
at Central Park Office until April 14
For more information call:
764 ~ 3486
Georgetown
University s
State
Summer Sessions, 1998
• Pre Session: May 18 - June 12
• First Session: June 8 - July 10
• Second Session: July 13 - August 14
• 8 Week Cross Session: June 8 - July 31
Choose from over 300 Undergraduate and
Graduate credit-bearing courses that will fit into
your college curriculum and enhance your
summer learning experience. Inquire about our
reduced tuition rates for summer.
Main Campus Course Offerings In:
Humanities
Sciences
Business
International Affairs
Languages
High School Programs
English as a Foreign Language
Programs Abroad
Please send me the summer school catalogue:
Name
Address
City
Phone
Georgetown University
306 Intercultural Center
Washington, DC 20057-1008
Tel: (202) 687-5942 Fax: (202) 687-8954
E-mail: ssce@gunet.georgetown.edu
Website: http://guweb.georgetown.edu/ssce
An affirmative aclion/ equal opportunity institution