This Is The I imI... 'U+tsicut&ledl presented by the MSC Literary Arts Committee November 8 at 7:00 PM MSC Forsyth Center Galleries The event will feature a dinner and an intellectually stimulating discussjon on works of literature that include miserable lifestyles in fictional societies. The topic will be introduced by Dr. Jimmie Kil 1 ingsworth of the English Department. Tickets for $14 and more info are at the MSC Box Office. Dress is business casual. LAC (k Persons with disabilities p'**se ail 86-15! 5 to infomi us of your specisl needs We request ncEfiatim thrw (3) woriang dra prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our ebiUties. The Walk is Finally Here!!! November 21, 2000 c ' .■ ^ r * < " ' - •-*" \ ■■ r- A ) ^^JKSS OW Elephant Walk Shirt Sales!!! November 6-20 MSC Nov 6-7 MSC Nov 13-14 Wehner Nov 8-9 Zachry Nov 15-16 MSC Nov 10 MSC Nov 17 MSC Nov 20 Presented By: Pacifica String Quartet Presented by Friends of Chamber Music and the Department of Performance Studies No admission charge November 6, 2000, 7:30 p.m. Bush Conference Center, TAMU FOR YOUR PAST, YOUR PRESENT AND YOUR FUTURE THE THREE-STONE DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY RING John D. Huntley Class of ‘79 313 B South College Avenue College Station, TX 77840 (979) 846-8916 Page 6 NEWS Monday, November 6,2® THE BATTALION Missing anglers named CORPUS CHRIST1 (AP) — DNA tests have identified partial re mains that washed up on Gulf beach es as two of three Austin men de clared missing in September when they failed to return from a fishing trip. DNA tests have linked the lower part of a right leg that washed up on Mustang Island Sept. 18 and a partial skeleton that washed up at the Padre Island National Seashore Sept. 26 as Danny Gonzales, 35, and Larry Car denas, 47, the Corpus Christi Caller- Times reported Sunday. The third man, Modesto Robles Jr., 43, is still missing. Texas Rangers spent Friday noti fying the men’s families of the iden tifications, which were made by com paring DNA from the bones with samples from the men’s parents. Constable Robert Sherwood told the newspaper that authorities were keeping an eye on Gulf Coast beach es should any more remains or debris from the men’s boat wash ashore. • “It’s been two months and we haven’t found anything else,” Sher wood said. “It’s strange that we’ve not found any parts of the boat. But t the water’s pretty unforgiving.” Authorities stopped looking for the men four days after the men set to sea Sept. 8 for a deep-sea fishing trip to Matagorda Bay. Coast Guard crews covered 35,000 miles and found no traces of the men or their 26-foot Wellcraft boat except for two coolers, one with a shoe tied to it. Hot off the presses day, Novemt Dr. Larry Peck of the chemistry department reads from a blazing chemistry book during a pre sentation of the chemistry roadshow on Saturday. Forty-one Bosnians laid to rest NOVOSEOCI, Bosnia-Herzegov- ina (AP) — Forty-one Muslims came home Sunday to this hamlet now set tled by Serbs, and they were buried by displaced and dispersed families who had spent eight years praying they might still be alive. It was yet another Bosnian drama, a vignette of life in a patchwork coun try that cannot find peace five years af ter the Dayton accords ended its war. Novoseoci died on Sept. 22, 1992, when Serb units assembled the small farming population in front of the mosque. Forty-five males were marched away. Damir Ocuz, at 14, “First We located a thigh hone. Then, all the rest/' ,qif| — Amor Masovic Head of the Bosnian missing persons agency was the youngest. Edhem Karie was 85. Everyone else fled. Until September of this year, sur vivors could only guess that their worst fears were true. Eventually, a dy ing Serb with a bad conscience toldanj thorities what many people had sus pected. Crews went to work at fvaij; Polje, three miles from here. “We had to move tons of garbag and also 15-ton chunks of the mosi the Serbs destroyed before we uncov ered the mass grave,” said Amoj Masovic, head of the Bosnian missing persons agency. “First we located a thigh bone. Then, all the rest.” Four of the missing were not found Masovic said Serbs had smashed the bodies together with a bulldozer, creating a nightmare puzzle for foren sic experts. gxas A&fv i give A& Join Sabre Inc. -* The IT leader for travel and transportation we HAVE THE FOLLOWING TECHNICAL CAREER OPPORTUNITIES • Research Group Consultants • Performance Analysts • Hardware Planners • Business Technology Analysts • Operations Research Analysts • Systems Architects • Technical Support Analysts • Web Developers • Programmer Analysts • Industrial Engineers • Design Engineers • Customer Support Analysts Project Managers Please join us for our Presentation Session at: 707 Rudder Tuesday, November 7th 7:00pm - 8:15pm www.sabre.com equal opportunity employer By Blaine. ! The Battal LEARN TO NOW* UNITED FLIGHT SYSTEMS Easily awarded student loans now available. You can learn to fly for as little as $50.°° per month. Located next to campus at Easterwood Airport. Discount Discovery Flight (with presentation of coupon) ■ Student Loans ■ Aviation Career Tracks ■ Private thru advanced training I Aircraft rental, Pilot Shop I F.A.A. approved 141 school VA Eligible Benefits =ri United Flight Systems, Inc. Easterwood Airport College Station, TX 409 260-6322 m IlLy still matters # * Radio news from the newsroom of THE BATTALION r> campus and community news 1:57 p.m. Monday through Friday on KAMU-FM 90.9 College Station / Bryan - igain.” i A&M ( ■anted to efs had a ; What s nee) opp< Pas able ie fourth liable to il Aggie Class of ‘61 still works. alancing the rights of the accused and the rights of society by using the experience of his service as an appellate judge and administrator, Bill Vance will bring leadership and integrity back to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. When you vote this November, remember that in life and law, integrity still matters and accountability still works. Elect Justice Bill Vince for Presiding Judge Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. www.billvance.com RR w< Lo U Lc w F< SI s