Page 6 • Thursday, September 3, 1998 N ews talion Enrollment Continued from Page 1 Though there are many specialities available in meteorology, the two that most undergraduates choose are forecasting and severe-weather tracking. Undergraduates are very interested in the field work they get to do in meteorol ogy. “Most undergraduates don’t usually know they will get to do field work,” McGuirk said, “but once they do, they’re hooked.” When Hurricane Bon nie was off the Gulf coast, four or five graduate stu dents logged around 30 flight hours observing hur ricanes. The undergraduates get to go out and track storms, and others get to work with radars and forecast the weather. “A significant number of our undergraduates be come professional meteo rologists,” McGuirk said. “I say this because they be gin to get paid for field work, and we have field programs running all of the time.” Nurse found dead in Trinity Ri GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas (AP) — Reena Varghese’s dresses still hang in the closet of the family’s brick home in suburban Irving. Her perfume bottles sit un touched. Framed pictures of her holding her newborn daughter hang on the bedroom walls, cap turing her eternally at age 25. But police announced Wednesday the young nurse’s remains had turned up along the banks of the Ttinity River. Varghese disappeared on a rainy night in April 1996 as she walked after work from Dallas’ Methodist Hospital to her car. Her husband, Roji, still re fuses to believe his wife will never walk through the front door again. “I still have hope it’s not her,” he said in a quiet voice af ter police announced the dis covery. ‘‘They could have made a mistake.” A forensic dentist confirmed Monday that a jawbone with teeth found in May matched Varghese’s dental records. Grand Prairie police Sgt. Alan Patton said. An Irving family found the bone while fishing near a bridge less than a mile from the Vargheses’ home. Investigators don't know how Varghese died or how long the bone had been there. Patton said police have no suspects. Grand Prairie and Dallas po lice scoured the TYinity for clues Wednesday, but called off their search in the after noon after finding nothing. They walked along its lush, tree-lined banks, searched the slow-moving water in boats and flew over it in helicopters. ‘‘It had to be worse than a needle in a haystack situation,” Patton said. He hopes to use sonar next to scan the bottom of the river. The find ends two and a half years of wondering whether Varghese was dead or alive. But most questions white Toyota Core missing. No one cell phone in hi paycheck she made charges on he Her husband through dozens his mind been a carjacking, cause her car much He wonde; someone for her medi m y (v i m -} v J- U I , Vi i l ' H FRIDAY EPTEMBER1 WOLF PEN CREEK as they wannarbe! TICKETS available at RISC box office. Bother's Bookstore & Dudley's Draw or charge by phone at 1-800-333-7188 Benefitting the Bonfire Committee Look for their Booth on Campns. m An Epic MSC OPAS enlighten • entertain 26 Season ■-» wJlf ^Ljp KJf , •••6 jg Smokey Joe's Cafe September 23-24 St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra October 15 Bully, An Adventure with Teddy Roosevelt starring John Davidson October 17-18 House of Blues Highway 61 October 21 e Military Sck -2839 for mo Charlotte Blake Storyteller February 28 Alsto The Island of the Skog April 10 Order your tickets now, call 845-1234.