he body oil e initial e\-l ■ toward J ■n by Li, I 'to the pj^B l'marine\;|| pTOi compa I fort irv/ve unknown (ursk sube death cett isted the The higlilj irbon-cont gasoline i Brief rupte pena Ihina (H as of ill- main evet sente' THEWA xount may not be official unti TINUES Nobody ever said that democracy was simple or efficient. But this is democracy in action." — Bob Crawford Agriculture Commissioner (t Our vote was )len. Three thou- and Buchanan n eiuppo tiers in the county fall of Jewish condo i the m! scandal pie were 5 residents? I don't Sglingnnilfr oestoof I think so." touchec — Don Liftman Gore supporter TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) —Gov. George W. Bush’s lead over Vie Presi dent A1 Gore in crucial Florida shrank to fewer than 300 votes by unofficial count Thursday with allegations of ir regularities swirling and ballots from overseas residents still to be counted. Recount results from 66 of the state’s 67 counties gave Republican Bush a lead of 229 votes out of nearly 6 million cast, according to an unofficial tally by the Associated Press. The original “fi nal” margin had been reported at 1,784. AP called each county election offi cial to get the final recount total for each candidate in the county. The official recount lagged behind, and Secretary of State Katherine Harris told an early evening news conference that it could be as late as next Tuesday — a week after the election — before the state has certified ballot results from all 67 counties. She also pointed out that it would take even longer— at least un til Nov. 17 — to tabulate ballots cast by thousands of Floridians overseas and postmarked by Election Day. Bush had 2,909,814 votes to 2,909,585 for Gore, a difference of 229. One election board member. Agri culture Commissioner Bob Crawford, defended the pace of the recount. “Nobody ever said that democracy was simple or efficient,” he said. “But this is democracy in action.” Crawford said anyone wanting sim plicity should look to the south, to Cuba, a reference to the dictatorship of Fidel Castro. The Gore campaign criticized the ballots in use in Palm Beach County as -The ;cusedfl ned Wi lessor )pe data on a 1 recanted irt refui t the claii jssman fficer, waj is be s in 5 tO I high-sf stem. ;ained s( from ^ at Moso CHAD ADAMS/The Battalion [M defensive back Jay Brooks tackles Kansas State quarterback lathan Beasley. Saturday's game against OU will be the second e A&M faces a Top 1 0 opponent at Kyle Field this season. itarggifs to face OU, a moking for upset JBlaine Dionne ’■Battalion At the beginning of this season, the as A&M football players already I the Oklahoma game circled on their edules. They wanted revenge for the 6 drubbing they received from the >ners in Norman, Okla., last year. What an opportunity the Aggies (7- verall, 5-1 Big 12) have for atone- nt now. The Sooners (8-0, 5-0) are No.l team in the country with a isman candidate at quarterback, and cM finds itself faced with the ulti- te spoiler role. ‘We’ve got to show up and prove to nation that we can play football,” d outside linebacker Jason Glenn, his is a big-time game, national TV. e No. 1 team in the nation going linst Texas A&M, a very solid foot- 1 program, and we’re going to come t there and show them that we can iy football, too.” The No. 1 Sooners are coming off a xessful tuneup game against the ©ales open at 9a.m. fo lifet holders See Football on Page 8. SELSO GARCIA/The Battalion confusing, and asked for a hand count of votes cast there and in three other counties. Palm Beach County agreed to hand-count ballots in three precincts on Saturday. In the meantime, a circuit judge is sued a preliminary injunction barring the canvassing commission in the coun ty from certifying the final recount re sults until a hearing is held Tuesday. That was in response to a legal chal lenge filed with the support of De mocrats who say a poor ballot design in the county led some Gore support ers to inadvertently mark their ballots for Pat Buchanan. The court order said the ballot was designed and printed in such a way that voters were deprived of their right to freely express their will. “We expect legal challenges,” said Clay Roberts of the Department of Elec tions, refusing to comment further. Thus far, 66 of Florida’s 67 counties have forwarded recount materials to the state. Harris said the board count was be hind the AP tally because the board is only reporting “those that are unoffi cially certified.” It.was unclear how many ballots from Floridians living overseas were still un counted— in fact still unreceived. An in formal survey of 28 of the 67 election su pervisors found that they had mailed more than 7,000, that a little less than half had been returned and no information was available on how many had been counted. That tally did not include some of the state’s largest counties, including Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. See Election on Page 2. Recount Vote Totals for Florida (from AP as of 9:30 p.m. absentee ballots outstanding) Bush 2,909,814 Gore 2,909,585 votes BRANDON HENDERSON/The Battalion House investigates network calls WASHINGTON (AP) — A House telecom munications panel launched, an investigation Thursday into what led news organizations to prematurely call Vice President A1 Gore the winner in Florida and whether that depressed voter turnout elsewhere in the country. The panel’s chairman. Republican Rep. Bil ly Tauzin of Louisiana, told reporters that the call for Gore, which was reversed a few hours later, happened before all polls in Florida had closed and may have deterred Republican vot ers in states where polls were open much later. Tauzin said that calling Florida for Gore “may have sent a signal out to Americans that this election was being decided in a way that was not accurate. When they’re being told by the networks that it’s already over, that’s akin to disenfranchising them.” Between 7:49 p.m. and 8 p.m. EST Tues day, NBC, CBS, CNN, Fox, ABC and the As sociated Press all called Florida, with its de cisive 25 electoral votes, for Gore. Polls were still open in the western part of Florida, which is>in the central time zone, as well as most states in the West. At about 9:55 p.m. EST, the networks and the AP began taking back those projections based on the actual Florida vote count that showed a tight race between Gore and Gov. George W. Bush. “When [Americans are] being told by the net works that it's already over, that's akin to dis enfranchising them” — Billy Tauzin House telecommunications panel chairman and Republican representative Accused B-CS rapist fights extradition, denies charges By Sommer Bunge The Battalion Fugitive Don Richard Davis Jr., arrested in Cleveland, Ohio, last week and accused of sexual ly assaulting two Texas A&M women, has chosen to fight ex tradition to Texas. Davis, an A&M graduate, was indicted in 1996 on two charges of aggravated sexual assault on the A&M campus. Just days before his scheduled trial, Davis skipped bail and has since been on the run. After an Oct. 24 arrest for a traffic violation in Cleveland, Davis’ fingerprints alerted au thorities that he was a fugitive from Texas. The Brazos County district attorney’s office must now ask the governor’s office to extradite Davis to Texas for trial. The extradition process en ables the Texas governor to ask the governor of another state to release a suspected fugitive to Texas’ custody. Davis is held in Ohio in lieu of a $10 million bail and is fighting extradition on the grounds that he is not the man authorities have been seeking. The Cleveland sher iff’s office initially thought Davis would choose to waive extradi tion. However, Davis’ appointed attorney may have advised him not to waive the extradition. “Extradition cases, in general, center around identity,” said Bra zos County District Attorney Bill Turner. “You have to carefully examine fingerprints and photos. What’s at issue here is whether he is the same person.” The extradition process can take 30 to 90 days, Turner said. In Texas, the two charges of aggravated sexual assault are pun ishable by up to 99 years in prison, said A&M University Po lice Department director Bob Wiatt. The evidence that police have against Davis makes the case rock-solid, he said. “We have a complete match of Davis’ DNA fitting with the two victims,” Wiatt said. “The [victims] have also identified him in a lineup.” According to The Bryan-Col- lege Station Eagle, Davis has been arrested twice since he skipped bail in Texas, and he has lied to police both times about his identity. He first used the name William Allen Webster and listed himself as homeless, then took the pseudonym Bryan Armstead. Posing as Armstead, Davis earned money as a bouncer and disc jockey at a strip club, he told Ohio police when he was arrest ed for the traffic violation. He was released but was arrested Oct. 31, after his fingerprints were checked by the Ohio crim inal justice computer system. A co-worker of Davis said the man he knows as Armstead has been in Cleveland for at least two years. The Eagle reported. If the extradition is success ful, a trial date will be set at a court in Brazos County. The dis trict attorney’s office cannot give a specific date yet. Early Wednesday, the TV networks called Florida for Bush and declared him winner of the presidential election, then were forced to back down on that projection as well. The AP did not declare an election winner. A recount is under way to determine the actual winner. Tauzin said he is sending a letter to the heads of the TV networks and the AP asking a series of questions about how the projections are made. Although Congress returns for a lame- duck session on the budget next week, Tauzin said hearings would probably not take place un til next year. Central to the probe, he said, is the role of the Voter News Service, a consortium of the networks and the AP that uses voter exit polls and actual results to help make election pro jections. Other news organizations subscribe to VNS data. “I don’t intend to violate the law or the spirit See Early Calls on Page 8. Driving program renewed By Auai i Bii.yi i a( iiakya The Bill tali on To combat reckless driving at in lerscctions and enforce automobile safety. Bryan and C ’ollege Station arc renewing the stale’s Selective Tral lie Enforcement Program (S'li l*). SI FT' is a two phase program: one phase is designed lor intersec tion traffic control, and the second phase for enforcing safe and sober driving. The Sale and Sober pro gram targets seat belt usage, child re strainls, speeding and DWIs. Both programs are funded by federal grants administered by the Texas I)epnrtmerit ol Transportation. “We can't measure an increase in tral fie or young drivers, hut since the start of the intersection control pro gram, there has been a 16 percent decrease in intersection wrecks and a 12 percent decrease in reported in juries,' said STEP administrator See STEP on Page 2.