Camp Longhorn Inks Lake & Indian Springs LOOKING FOR: Counselors Nurses Nursing Assistants Office Photographers (experience preferred) Want a REWARDING Summer Job? For June, July or August? We will be interviewing: TUESDAY, Feb. 15th 9:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. in MSC 1405-A Harvey Road C.S., Texas 77840 (409) 680-1385 'Engagement Rings *Loose Diamonds *Custom Design jewelry Repair Special Ring Sizing Regular 1/2 Price . Ladies Size Up $Xs s 5.50 Ladies Size Down $ 4.50 Gents Size Up $>^5 $ 6.50 Gents Size Down $J>0Q s 5.50 Chain Solder $ 4.00 All genera 1 jewelry repa ir is half price until Feb. 28, 2000. Estimates available upon request. FREE JEWELRY CLEANING & INSPECTION! Ag Workers Mutual Auto Insurance Archer Daniels Midland Co. Aventis Crop Science Cargill ContiGroup Companies, Inc. — Cattle Feeding Division Environmental Care, Inc. Excel Corporation Holm-Dietz FAMOUS Software Fireman’s Fund Agribusiness, Inc. IBP, Inc. Lambert Landscape Co. Lawns of Dallas Peace Corps PIC Premium Standard Farms Sanderson Farms, Inc. Sunkist Growers, Inc. Texas Agricultural Extension Service Texas Agricultural Statistics Service Texas A&M Career Center Texas Parks & Wildlife Tractor Supply Company T-Systems International USDA/AMS/Dairy Programs Wright Brand Foods Learn more about these companies on the C.O.A.L.S. web page at http://coals, tamu.edu. GuarantyBank A Temple-Inland Financial Services Company GuarantyBank, the cornerstone of Temple-Inland Financial Services, invites you to follow your path to a career in commercial lending. If you are a finance or accounting major graduating in May or December 2000, we invite you to explore the exceptional career opportunities at GuarantyBank. Visit our representatives at the GuarantyBank Information Session and Reception on Tuesday, February 22 at 6:00 p.m. at Cafe Eccell. Register with the A&M Career Center for on-campus Interviews held Thursday, March 2. To R.S.V.P. or for more information, please contact: GuarantyBank, College Relations MEMBER 8333 Douglas Avenue, Suite 620 Dallas, TX 75225 l=J 800/999-1726 ext. 1929 asiws 214/360-4894 FAX E-mail: collegerecruiting@gfbank.com www.gfbank.com FDIC O 2000 Guaranty Federal Bank, F S B NATION Page 10 THE BATTALION Monday, Febmar Shuttle approaches asteroid’s orbi LAUREL, Md. (AP) —A robot craft that missed its mark a year ago is on target for a Valentine’s Day ren dezvous with an asteroid named for the Greek god of love. The Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft is approaching the asteroid Eros slowly and is expected to slip into orbit around the mountain-sized space rock at midmoming Monday. Ifsuccessful, NEAR will become the first spacecraft to orbit an asteroid. Researchers hope data compiled about Eros could one day help humans defend the Earth against a “killer asteroid” like one thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Eros, a potato-shaped rock, is 21 miles long and eight miles wide; by comparison. New York’s Manhat tan island is about 13.5 miles long and 2.5 miles wide. Like this planet, Eros orbits the sun, about 160 million miles from Earth. The $224 million NEAR mission was launched Feb. 17, 1996. The craft was supposed to have gone into an orbit of Eros in January 1999, hut it malfunctioned af ter a rocket firing that was to have aimed the spacecraft at the asteroid was shut down automatically. NEAR sped past Eros, capturing photos as it went. Then, for reasons still not understood, the craft went out of control and lost contact with Earth for more than 24 hours. “We know why the rocket motor shut down,” said Robert Farquhar, the mission director. “But what hap pened after that is a mystery.” The craft apparently went into wild gyrations and burned about 20 percent of its fuel before it righted itself. With just 10 minutes of power left, NEAR fi nally was able to aim its solar panels at the sun again and start charging its battery, Farquhar said. If the bat tery had failed, the spacecraft might not have been heard from again. Instead, engineers regained control and plotted a new course. NEAR and Eros circled the sun for a year in separate orbits. A series of rocket firings has now brought them close again. NEAR is to be within 200 miles of Eros at 10:33 a.m. Monday. It will lire small rocket thrusters to drop it into the weak gravity field of Eros and start a y ear long orbit of the asteroid. During the year, the craft will descend slowly and slip into lower and lower orbits. Late in the year, NEAR may actually brush Eros’ surface with a solar panel and photograph the mark it leaves. “That’s one of several options the team is considering for the end of the mission,” said Farquhar. a scientist at the John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laborato ry where NEAR was designed and built under NASA con tract. Scientists from Cornell University and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory' also are part of the NEAR team. Asteroid rendezvous The Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spaceoaii b into orbit around the asteroid Eros. It will be the first spaciv an asteroid. Here is a looK at NEAR's journey through spao Ac NEAR! era, that wi The mstnin tion and ms tos in differ '■ill UWC Ilk'll0! : ,:r:u:;,r era will sendbaj id-u bite and cdj e ot both scieoct t!ic <.hicl projtc Chocolate lovers A recent poll asked more than 1,000 people to name their favorite type of chocolate. Milk chocolate won hands-down with 65 percent versus only 27 percent for dark chocolate. The disparity between the two was thinner, though, in older age groups and in people with a higher level of education. Favorite kind of chocolate by age 16-24 yrs Milk Choc 9 82% : 64% Dark Chocolate 25-34 yrs. J 11% 27% 35-44 yrs. 9 65% 26% 45-54 yrs. i 59°/ 37% 55-64 yrs. i 57% 9 35% 65 and over 2 65°. 22% Favorite kind of chocolate by education Some high school Milk Choc 72% Dark Chocolate High school graduate 9 68% 15% 9 9 23% Some college 9 * 29% Regardless of their College preference, Americans graduate appetite for chocolate has swelled over the past decade. U.S. chocolate consumption 14 pounds per person 12* 10 59°/ Former Cowboys coach Tom Landry dead at 75 8 33% Some respondants said they don’t know or have no favorite. 0 -- ’83 ’98 IRVING, Texas (AP) — Tom Landry, the Dallas Cowboys coach who led America’s Team to five Super Bowls and was famous for pacing the sidelines in a business suit and felt fedora, died Saturday. I le was 75. Landry had been undergoing treatment since May for acute myelogenous leukemia. Baylor University Medical Center issued a news release on behalf of Landry’s family, say ing, “He w ill never be forgotten by all of us whose lives he has touched so deeply.” “Tom Landry’s familiar presence on the Dallas Cowboys' sideline for three decades rep resented the NFL at its best,” NFL commis sioner Paul Tagliabue said in a statement Sat urday. “He will always rank as one of the all-time great coaches and as an architect of one of the most successful teams in sports history.” Landry, who coached the Cowboys for their first 20 years, won two Super Bowls with star quarterback Roger Staubach. 1 lis 270 victories are more than any NFL coach except Don Sim la and George Halas. Landry made his mark through innovations in offense and defense and considered them his greatest contribution to the game. His legacy continued through the coaches he trained, in- Ditk In L Co straight lo -6. "ust eight r i representi 1 A&M in ( Source: American Chocolate Manufacturers When Landry left, he was as much bol ot the ('ow boys as the star on theirhete “Simply stated, he is the singlemostim tant figure in the history of this franch Jones said Saturday. “I think the whole Cowboys imajs# from him," said Staubach, who intruC Landry at his Hail of Fame enshnnemrt 1900, just as 1 andry had JowtochitninIPS&llege World 1 undrv was a college star avi.dm\«'!«ggie baseball of Texas and a defensive back fortkNcwVinuclion. As al Giants in one oflhe innovative defenses o! fill fans pack th early 1950s. \t 20. he became a player-o Olsen Field anc in charge ol defense, and his new sYSteni'flir beloved A came such successes that Landry had todBars, those wh offenses to counter them. j -v' ■intothestai _ m Jtlield fence, t HOPE PREGNANCY CENTERS OF BRAZOS VALLEY FACING AN UNPLANNED PREGNANCY? YOU DON'T HAVE TO FACE IT ALONE. ♦ Free & Confidential Pregnancy Tests ♦ Pregnancy, Adoption & Abortion Education ♦ Practical Assistance ♦ Post Abortion Counseling ♦ Adoption, Medical & Community Service Referrals 846-1097 3620 E. 29TH ST • BRYAN Be on your way to an “A • Organized, detailed, typed r • Done by top students in cla: • Fast quality service • Semester packs, exam packs, and daily note HOW DOES IT WORK? Top students in selected classes take notes which available for you to pick up the NEXT DAY! You may pick up the notes w daily, weekly, or before exams - whenever. hijid right field Affectionately b ACCT 209.501 BOON 324.501-502 HIST 106.501 MICR 351.501-510 RDNG 351.5(11 ACCT 405.501-504 BOON 324.501-502 HIST 106.503-504 MKTG 321.501-502 RENR 205J’ ANTH 201.501 FINC 201.501-504 HIST 106.511 MKTG 322.505-506 SC0M 327.5(1 ANTH 202.500 FINC 341.501-503 HIST 106.513 MKTG 347.501-502 S0CI 205.5035 ANTH 205.505 GENE 301.509-511 INFO 364.502-503 POLS 206.502 SOCI316.50A ANTH 301.500 GE0G 201.501 INFO 364.504 POLS 206.506-507 THAR 101.501 j ANTH 317.500 GE0G 203.507-522 JOUR 301.500 POLS 207.501,503 VAPH 305,501’S BIOL 113.503 GE0G 301.501 LING 209.500 POLS 207.504-505 VAPH 404.500 BIOL 114.503 GE0G 305.500 MGMT 105.500 POLS 207.507,509 VTPB 409.501 EC0N 202.505-506 GE0G 323.500 MGMT 211.501-502 POLS 207.508 Z00L 107.5011 BOON 202.508 GE0L 101.519-527 MGMT 211.503-504 POLS 207.510-511 Z00L 320.501'! BOON 203.504-505 GE0L 101.528-536 MGMT 212.503-504 PSYC 305.503 BOON 322.501-502 HIST 105.503 MGMT 363.501-502 PSYC 307.501-502 liind the left ^Jitlte game ofl tailing their ne ;et a look at the J So much for ■which detem are then type |>bletOgetlc y arently not mission retur M Univers :harge fans v ce again, the 694-9403 707 Texas Ave. (Next to Barnes & , 222C Noble) Sm be sp Camp Olympia’s program is outrageously fun and exciting. We are looking for counselors to make a CampcsT) Olympia difference in a child’s life. You can begin the adventure of a lifetime this summer at Camp Olympia. With over 35 different activities, it is the perfect place for friendships, fun, adventure and GREAT people. Term Dates: May 29 to June 11, June 12 to July 2, July 3 to July 23, July 24 to August 6. Kathy Davis Tommy Ferguson Texas A&M University Flag Room 1 st Floor MSC Feb. 14, 15, and 17 ,h ,2000 10:00 AM-3:00 PM Koute 2, Box 25-13 • Trinity, TX 75662 409-594-2541 • www.campolympia.com MAC Hospitality presents... Atudent Etiquette Dinner Tuesday, Feb. To & Thursday, Feb. 17 Faculty Club 5:30-8:00 p.m. An expert in the field of etiquette will provide information and hel| hints to use in a formal setting. The meal will consist of seven course; the cost is $8.00. Tickets may be purchased at the Box Office. Please call 845-1515 with any questions, j-u "'Dress is business casual that the Fir nendment w aimed at pre from — the ml official o Sitrol,” said I Her, a profe: stern New I No, Miller obvious an [tier, Saddan farthy. Insteac ated mayor dolph Giuli Such crilici allow at firs I'ed some of sever recoi ituents. Giuli Id defend the has been legen play Night Li Its against A |ohn Rocker. More impoi Edited with s New York Ice, a feat d( selection. T1 thods with \ y to grace gi ion in his cu pited States ^billing hims [