SUMMER cni^ TA r d MCI WORLDCOM SPECIALS! Wireless Digital Phone • Long Distance • Roaming Caller ID • 3 Way Calling • Call Forwarding Call Waiting • First Incoming Minute Pager with Phone Activation Kelly Baker Pager Number 1-888-462-8977 At the Brazos Hall, across from parking lot from Chicken Oil Thurs. & Fri., 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. /Tl The Princeton Review Over 94% of Princeton Revinv students enrolled based on a friend's recommemkition. GMAT Take the GMAT before the Fall semester. 979.696.90991 www.PrincetonReview.com a* *»»»* fMr* if, m «Mnd »at fWiaiw * MW TONIGHT Ladies' Night Ladies 18 and up in FREE all night! $ 1 pints all night $ 1 bar drinks til 11 p.m. HAVE A SAFE 4 th OF JULY! 696-5570 for details Party Safe and Designate a Driver Pljase II 2 Bedroom - 2 Bath! t i •Si now ijeasing T 2000 T FcatuiTug: Fully Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartments Electronic Alarm System Private Bedroom/Individual Leases Full Size Washer & Dryer Fully Equipped Kitchen Clubhouse with Pool Tables & Weight Room Student Activities & Service Areas Swimming Pools, Hot Tub, Volleyball On Shuttle Route UNIVERSITY ♦ C 0 M M 0 N S ♦ □□□□I !□□□□[ mmi mm f uuuu; l 950 Colgate Drive • 764-8999 Page 2 NEWS Thursday, July 6,20( mrsday.July 6,2000 THE BATTALION Double dutch Ankur Bahl (I to r), Damon Lemmons and Laura Mercer, members of the U.S. Amateur Jump Rope Team, showed their moves at the Huntsville Fourth of July Patriotic Freedom Parade on Tuesday. The team is comprised of people from all over America. The team performs in competi tions, workshops and shows across the nation. Testimony given in Waco trial WACO (AP) — Federal agents leame; how to treat chest wounds and otherfc aid techniques during training for the 1 raid on the Branch Davidian complex, federal agent acknowledged Wednesday, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms agent Gerald Petrilli testifiedth he and other agents expected only to into fistfights with sect members on Feb' 1993, when they planned to search building for illegal weapons and arrests® leader David Koresh. Instead, the raid led to a gun KYLE WHITACF j/ ITs which four agents and six membersoflli ith the bliste again, conce summer mu aimed music conno es into arenas to 1 ibbing elbows and ( eaty biker who sax Branch Davidian cult were killed. U ' est0 P a > tieadmis started a 51-day standoff that ended Ap; P en 1 u su 1 111 19, 1993, when the cult's compounds: oersuoun m 1 u ll Waco burned down, killing about 80s« members. Petrilli was testifying for the govemme! which is defending itself against a wrongfi death lawsuit filed by Branch Davidiansi vivors and relatives seeking $675 million Under cross-examination, Petrilli* knowledged that prior to the raid, sou agents were taught by personnel atFo: ctstoosst he natior Judge wants ships uncovered Hood, a nearby Army post, how to Mystery of Civil War buried 40 feet underground minister field intravenous lines and tre shock and gunfire wounds. He said blood type was stenciled on his neckac leg before the raid. Robert White, a former ATF agent, MONTGOMERY, La. (AP) — The judge's town car tears along the dirt road, bumping to a halt in the middle of a muddy field. Pine trees nustle in the bluffs. A snowy egret glides along a pond. The judge's mind is racing back i36 years, to a time when the crack le of musket-fire flew across the ijieadow and the smell of gunpow der filled the air. A time when the ponderous Red River meandered through this spot, and gunboats struggled to navigate its shallow waters. Two of the ships are still here — buried 40 feet beneath Mike Wahlder's boots. "I just want the whiskey and the guns," booms Wahlder, a blustery 65-year-old Social Security judge who lives on a plantation, owns thousands of acres in the area and calls the Civil War wrecks the pride of his "backyard." Wahlder's eyes twinkle. The truth is no one knows if any whiskey or guns exist, and if they do, it is not clear who would get them: Wahlder ,who owns the land, or the U.S. government, which claims the ships. Over the years; the river changed course around the wrecks and it now flows 150 feet to the west. The boats were covered by sediment, and eventually, by woodland. The judge would like to dig them up. Wahlder has no personal ties to these ships. He jokes that his fami ly's only connection to the Civil War is the fact that some of his an- History is romantic. And I am romantic. — Mike Wahlder Social Security judge cestors were Confederate deserters. He loves the smell of history as much as the smell of a challenge. And he is not a man to turn his back on either. This is a man who, at age 21, spotted a beautiful woman in a travel brochure, tracked her to Is rael and married her. ’ A man who challenged David Duke for the U.S. Senate in 1990, knowing he did not have a hope, but determined to air his opinions regardless. A man who feeds $100 bills into the riverboat casino slot-machines in Vicksburg, and sometimes walks away with thousands. Wahlder's parties at his antique- filled mansion in the woods are leg endary. His holdings are too. They include a riverside bluff where a mythical Indian princess named Creola was courted by her soldier lover (Wahlder is so enamored by the tale, he is incorporating a town in her name), a plot where archaeologists dug up a 45 million year old di nosaur fossil, and a portion of a buried 16th century Spanish mission. "I like dabbling in history," Wahlder says. "History is romantic. And I'm a romantic." He is also a pragmatic business man who knows that history can be lucrative, whether it is buying sites that can later be sold to the govern ment, or getting a tax break for pro tecting history on his land. testified last week that writing anagen! mgs like drugs anc blood type on his body was not standi procedure and was recommended by' military. The ATF brought tents, medical ass tance, portable toilets and water to take® ans). People with k rangers while atten le portable toilets. / lols will shout exph it on them after ste irlfriends. All this ft summer tours ith Lollapalooza in I's, which toured pi ve and rarely enter! dnfans of alternatic ut like everything e idustry, the corpora nand sucked it dry tivity and vitality it ut. All of a sudden, nd... well... profits. Then someone re nown in the enterta nd the listeners (als xchange music files md listen to them at But Big Brother, a found out, and recor of Davidians who were to be taken into® tody, Petrilli said, but never had a chaw use those supplies. "We never made it to the frontdoor the structure," he testified. As witiWAmericandream of agents started approaching the bufeA commercialism and said, "the entire front of the com] erupted in gunfire." Earlier Wednesday, Jacob Mabb,ah year-old who left the compound get real jobs instead CDs teenagers buy t decide to affiliate th< So instead of beii evening of the raid, recalled helping^ nane vocals, the sui ammunition into gun magazines during raid. He also remembered seeing boxes! magazines and ammunition stored» concrete vault in the structure. News in Brief Law signed requiring dorm sprinklers tically charged eve In the first corner Idest, band going r lembers angry abo reasing, they depl tricted trading of forced to accept le modestly more SOUTH ORANGE, NJ. (AP) — Gov. Christie Whitman on Wednes day went to the site of a deadly col lege fire to sign a law requiring au tomatic sprinklers in all dormitories. Three Seton Hall University freshmen were killed and 58 stu dents injured in a blaze at a dormi tory Jan. 19. Experts said auto matic sprinklers could have extinguished the fire quickly. Every school must have ; klers installed within four yeafs Schools can apply for no-interesto 1 low-interest loans. The law applies to private art public schools as well as fraterti! and sorority houses. Seton Hall plans to have; klers available by fall. Thecaus! of the fire remains under invest gation. 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