The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 04, 1999, Image 2

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    Page 2 • Wednesday, August 4, 1999
Mom gets 45 years
in newborn’s death
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — An 18-
year-old woman has been sen
tenced to 45 years in prison for
killing her newborn son.
The baby was found in a plas
tic bag in a bedroom closet more
than a day after his birth on Dec.
14, 1997.
The mother. Hazel Tolliver of
Converse, was 16 when she de
livered the 7-pound, full-term in
fant. She claimed the baby was
conceived during a rape. Tolliver
was convicted last week of mur
der and injury to a child.
In her testimony, Tolliver said
she repeatedly passed out after
giving birth alone on the bath
room floor of her family’s home.
She said she did now know how
the infant ended up in the bag in
the closet.
Her mother took her to a hos
pital hours after the birth, un
aware her daughter had been
pregnant and had delivered a
child.
The teen-ager initially denied
having been pregnant, but when
pressed by doctors she told her
mother where to find the baby,
officials said. But by then, the in
fant was dead. A Bexar County
medical examiner testified the
baby lived for four to eight
hours.
Plano police shoot,
kill murder suspect
PLANO (AP) — A suspect want
ed for questioning in two Missouri
murders and numerous robberies
was shot and killed by police yes
terday in a busy suburban Dallas
shopping center.
Plano police spokesperson Carl
Duke said the man, whose name
was not immediately released, was
wanted in Clay and Jackson coun
ties in Missouri. Duke did not have
details on those cases.
However, a Kansas City, Mo.,
television station reported the sus
pect was wanted for the murder of
a 18-year-old woman, Christy
Schroeder.
Her body was found in a pond
south of Liberty, Mo., on July 11 by
relatives who said they became
concerned when she turned up
missing.
Plano police say Missouri au
thorities contacted them yesterday,
saying the suspect was believed to
be in the area. Missouri police
asked authorities in Plano to be on
the lookout for him.
Around 4 p.m., officers ap
proached a white Chevrolet pickup
in a strip mall parking lot.
“One of our patrol officers lo
cated the suspect’s vehicle and
called for backup,” Duke said. “As
they approached the vehicle, there
were some shots fired. Right now
it’s all still under investigation.”
Duke said there would also be
an internal investigation into the
shooting.
F
improvisational comedy
One Easy Step
to Self
Improv-ment!
Saturday, August 7
9 p.m. Rudder Auditorium
Tickets are $4 in advance
$5 at the door
• Wednesday. Aucust 4 •
PIANO BAR
with Steve Green
$ 1. 75 24 oz. Chuggers all nite
• Thursday. August 5*
$ 1 M LONGNECKS $ 1 M
For more info call 696 - 5570
Party Safe! Designate a Driver.
N
EWS
Zapruder family to get
$16 million for JFK film
Aid
The Battal i
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
government must pay the heirs of
Dallas dressmaker Abraham Za
pruder $16 million for his film
that captured the assassination of
President Kennedy — 26 seconds
of history the Zapruder family
said should be valued like a van
Gogh.
In a 2-1 vote, announced by the
Justice Department yesterday, ar
bitrators set the amount after
lawyers for the government and
Zapruder family could not agree
on a price.
The government offered $1
million; the family asked $30 mil
lion.
“The Zapruder film is one of a
kind,” arbitrators Arlin Adamsand
Kenneth Feinberg wrote in a ma
jority opinion.
With no way to compare its
value to any single object ever
sold, they said they relied heavily
on testimony given by auction
house experts who tagged the val
ue at $25 million or more.
The third arbitrator, Walter
Dellinger, a former solicitor gen
eral and now a law professor at
Duke University, wrote that $3
million to $5 million would have
been enough.
'7 understand that
its the American
way to get as much
as you can for
something, but
there is something
unseemly about it”
—Gerald Posner
Author of book on assassination
Gerald Posner, who wrote a
book on the assassination,
thought $16 million was overly
generous, too.
“I understand that it’s the
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American way to get as much as
you can for something, but there
is something unseemly about it,”
he said.
Lawyers for both sides accept
ed the figure as an appropriate
compromise. The family said in a
statement, “We believe the result
reached by the arbitration panel is
fair and reasonable.”
The film is stored in a 25-de
gree room at the National
Archives in College Park, Md.
The Assassination Records Re
view Board in 1997 declared the
film the permanent possession of
the people of the United States.
The Constitution requires the gov
ernment to pay owners of private
property taken for the public
good.
David Ogden, acting assistant
attorney general for the Justice
Department’s Civil Division, is
sued a statement, saying the gov
ernment was relieved the film
would not just be stored at the
archives but would be part of its
permanent collection.
1999
BY I
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However, other
teams do not have acai
visers and tutors whoti,
the team.
Jason Hutchins, AW
ball coaching assistant,
though baseball players in
tutors and attend study:
ing the week, advisersu
do not travel with thete;
Phil Stephenson, AW!
coaching assistant, said:
does not bring tutorsoiisj
because the girls are: j
get academic help dtk
week. HEight p
Stephenson said till A&M s 199L
overall grade point ran invited to j>l
Despite its strongacade,T western Be
none of the soccer plave .All Star loo
oi .i 'full-ride"scholardifHLast Lues
“Coach Guerrieri i.v; Aggies were
,■ i ' >.ii li i believe: ty t” shower
should have tocontribnejlaine alone;
he said. high schoc
Stephenson said th: .northern .n
apply even to oneofthiilrHxas.
cer recruits who played:!® I i u ’ gain
co's team in the recentl!®rter Stadi
Many female athlete;fTexas Chris
11,us Hall, without the: fganic won
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voers, but female ai: ^N'ei'th and t:
use the facilities locate: pressive nig
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Heart
Continued from Page I
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Want a Free T-shirt???
Help us start a new tradition, in the Spirit of Ags helping Ags,
by volunteering to aid Freshmen and their parents the day
they move into the Residence Halls.
All volunteers will be given a t-shirt to be worn on check-in
day August 25. If you are interested in helping the newest
members of our Aggie family, contact Sandra Mitchell in
YMCA 110, call 862-3158, or log onto our website at
http://reslife.tamu.edu/info/ for an application.
Let’s show the young Ags what “Aggie Spirit” is all about.
Gig ‘Em,
Department of Residence Life
AGGIE RING ORDERS
THE ASSOCIATION OF FORMER STUDENTS
CLAYTON W. WILLIAMS, JR. ALUMNI CENTER
DEADLINE: AUGUST 5, 1999
Undergraduate Student Requirements:
(These requirements must have been completed by summer term 1)
1. You must be a degree seeking student and have a total of 25. undergraduate 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. (£(2 undergraduate 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 suc
cessful semester requirement described in the following paragraph. Should your degree be conferred with less
than 60 undergraduate resident credits, this requirement will be waived after you graduate and your degree
is posted on the Student Information Management System.
2Q undergraduate 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 completed cither
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).
3. You must have a 2.0 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 August 1999 degree candidate and 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.
However, if you have completed all of your course work prior to this semester and have been cleared by the the
sis clerk, you may request a “letter of completion: from the Office of Graduate Studies (providing it is not past
their deadline). 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 and you wish to receive your ring on October 14, 1999, you must
visit the Ring Office no later than Thursday, August 5, 1999 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. to
complete the application for eligibility verification.
It is recommended that you do not wait until August 5 to apply for your ring audit. Should there be a prob
lem with your academic record, or if you are blocked, you may not have sufficient time to resolve these mat
ters before the order closes out on August 6.
2. Return no later than August 6, 1999 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. to check on the status of
your audit and if qualified, pay in full by cash, check, money order, or your personal Discover, Visa or
MasterCard (with your name imprinted).
Men’s 10K-$313.00
14K - $411.00
Women’s 10K-$197.00
14K-$218.00
* Add $8.00 for Class of‘98 or before.
The ring delivery date is October 14. 1999.
Sorry, tickets not sold in advance. First come — first served bash*
105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Kasie Byers, Editor in Chief
Sallie Turner, Managing Editor
Veronica Serrano, Executive Editor
Mark McPherson, Graphics Editor
Riley LaGrone, Aggielife Editor
Matt Webber, Night News Editor
Sallie Turner, Photo Editor
Guy Rogers, Photo Editor
Kyle Whitacre, Radio Produo
Veronica Serrano, City Edit
Noni Sridhara, Campus Edit
Caleb McDaniel, Opinion El
Doug Shilling, Sports I
Staff Members
City - Carrie Bennett, Sameh Fahmy, Ryan
West, Suzanne Brabeck & Stuart Hutson.
Sports - Jeff Webb, Santosh Venkataraman,
Michael Rodgers, Ruth Stephens & Reece Flood.
Aggieufe - Assistant: Stephen Wells; Aaron Meier,
Scott Harris, Brian Fleming & Michael Maddux.
Opinion - Tom Owens, Jeff Becker, Mark
Passwaters, Marc Grether, Chris Huffines,
Megan Wright, Aaron Meier, Beverly Mireles
&Ryan Alan Garcia.
Photo - JP Beato, Mike Fuentes, Terry
Roberson, Bradley Atchison &
Graphics - Assistant: Gabriel Ruenes;
Wagener & Jeffrey Smith.
Cartoonists -Ruben DeLuna.
Copy Editors - Amy Daugherty, Mariuu
■ Mohiuddin, Mandy Cater Graeber&W
Meier.
Page Designers - Manisha Parekii
Radio - Andrea Bragdon, Paul Bream,to
Campbell. Francis Fernandez, JasonP#
News: Die Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in tire Division of Student Pnblcatosi^
Department of Journalism. News offices are in 013 Reed McDonald Building, Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845$ :
batt@tamvml.tamu.edu; Website: http://battalion.tamu.edu
Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For campus, local, and natM
Using, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office Irons ait8r s:
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 Battali*® ;
additional copies 254. Mail subscriptions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester and $17.50 for the sw* 1
by credit card, call 845-2611.
The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Mondaytliw/ v
ing the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at Me#
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, 015 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station,H 7®^’
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