HASSLE FREE from VARSITY FORD www.varsityflm.com HIGH REBATES LOW INTEREST RATES COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAMS MUSTANGS, FOCUS & TRUCK SPECIALS! (Questions? - e-mail us at ross@varsityflm.com) CAN YOU USE $25 BUCKS AN HOUR OFFICIATING AMATEUR SPORTS IN YOUR AREA? IT'S EASY MONEY AND NO EXPERIENCE IS REQUIRED. LOG ON: www.Imasportsref.com MEN, WOMEN, STUDENTS NEEDED Page 6A The Adventurer A f/ni The Explorer (wheeled duffel bag 26” x 13” x 13”) (wheeled backpack 21” x 14” x 8”) • 2 bags in 1 - easily converts from a wheeled upright into a traditional duffel bag • Heavy-duty carry straps • 3 bags in 1 easily converts from a wheeled upright into a backpack into a traditional carry on • Detachable daypack with padded shoulder straps A&M Travel has your bags for Spring Break &• Summer trips to Europe & all destinations! A&M Travel Service 700 University Dr. East, Ste. 102 846-8881 ATMetttors Texas A&M faculty, staff and administrators helping students. College of Architecture Architecture Dr. Robin Abrams Ms. Janice Ashley Dr. David Ekroth Mr. Rodney Hill Dr. Mardelle Shepley Dr. Guillermo Vasquez de Velasco Accounting Dr. Lorence Bravenec Dr. Stanley Kratchman Dr. L. Murphy Smith Dr. Robert Strawser College of Education Finance Mr. Ed Elmore Dr. John Groth Dr. Lawrence Wolken Construction Science Dr. David Bilbo Dr. Charles Graham Dr. Nancy Holland Dean's Office Dr. Frank Ashley Ms. Debi Buckley Mr. David Byrd Dr. Jane Conoley Ms. Shannon Fite Ms. Amy Klinkovsky Ms. Vida Wilhelm Ms. Rose Schmitz Mr. Frank Thomas Dr. Ping Xiang College of Geosciences Dean's Office Ms. Cathy Littleton Mr. Rodney Paris Dr. Mary Richardson Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning Dr. Chang-Shan Huang Dr. Donald Sweeney Ms. Nancy Volkman Info and Operations Management Mr. Paul Ammons Ms. Louise Darcey Ms. Amerika Grewal Ms. DeRenda McGee Ms. Caudette Peterson Educational Human Resource Development Dr. Paulette Beatty Dr. Larry Dooley Ms. Joyce Nelson Dr. Kenneth Paprock Geography Dr. Robert Bednarz Geology and Geophysics Dr. Richard Carlson Dr. Christopher Mathewson Dr. David Sparks Graduate Programs Office Ms. Jill Raupe Undergraduate Programs Office Ms. Shirley Baker Ms. Debbie Lockledge Ms. Susie Striegler Management Dr. Michael Abelson Mr. Ed Elmore Ms. Kristi Mora Mr. Keith Swim Center of Distance Learning Ms. Jan Fernandez Dr. Jim Woosley Marketing Dr. Stephen McDaniel Fellows and Honors Dr. Tim Peterson Educational Psychology Ms. Angela Albrecht Dr. Patricia Lynch Dr. Linda Parrish Ms. Carol Wagner Oceanography Dr. William Bryant Dr. Benjamin Giese Dr. William Slager Dr. Niall Slowey College of Business Executive Development Dr. Ben Welch Graduate Programs Ms. Lisa Weimer Dean 's Office Ms. Lara Zuehlke Undergraduate Programs Dr. Linda Windle Health and Kinesiology Dr. Paul Batista Ms. Cynthia Davis Dr. Maurice Dennis Dr. P.J. Miller Ms. Jennifer Mullen Mr. Mark Reinberg The-ATMe/rtors Program consists of approximately 350 Texas A&M faculty, staff, and administrators who volunteer extra office hours to make themselves available to students. Mentors names will be appearing in the Battalion throughout the week. For more information on these and other Mentors check out the ATMentors website at: http://mentors.tamu.edu Showcasing over 50 apartment complexes, property management companies and locator services. Stop by to gather information on prices, floorplans, and FREE STUFF! For more information call 845-1741 or stop by ^ Adu(f, Graduate Off Campus Student Services in YMCA320. =J MSC E.L. Miller Science and Technology Committee Fueling the Future: UtenathNi Fuels and Eagiaes featuring Dr. Mark Halfzapple Tuesday, February 20 ffl 7:00 p.m. Rudder 601 Tuesday, February 20 u 7:00 p.m. Rudder 601 FreeAdmisssion http://elmiller.msc.tamu.edu Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 NATION Tuesday, Febr.. day, Febr - THE BATTALION Police arrest two teen for stabbing of professoto NEW CASTLE, Ind. (AP) — Two teen-agers wanted in the stab bing deaths of two Dartmouth Col lege professors were arrested Mon day after authorities acting on a hunch used a CB radio to lure the boys to an Indiana truck stop. James Parker, 16, and Robert Tul- loch, 17, were captured peacefully before dawn at an Interstate 70 truck stop more than 700 miles from the site of the slayings in Hanover, N.H. Suspects arrested On Monday, police in New Castld, Ind. arrested two suspects in the Jan. 27 murder of two Dartmouth College professors. Two boys matching the supects’ desciptions were seen Friday in Sturbridge, Mass. Sgt. William Ward of the Henry County Sheriff’s Department said he heard a trucker say he was carrying two teens who were looking for a ride to California. Ward, who had seen television re ports that the Dartmouth suspects might be headed to California, got on the CB and suggested the teens might find a ride at the Flying J truck stop south of New Castle. “I just said, ‘Why don’t you drop them off at the fuel desk and some one will pick them up in a few min utes?’ ” Ward said. The teens were caught a short time later as they were asking anoth er trucker for a ride. Said Ward: “It was a long shot, and I didn’t expect it would be them.” Parker and Tulloch are charged as adults with two counts of first-de gree murder in the deaths of Half and Susanne Zantop, whose bodies were found in their home Jan. 27. Henry County Sheriff Kim Cronk said Monday the pair will appear in court Tuesday morning for an extra dition hearing unless they waive ex tradition from New Castle, which is 40 miles east of Indianapolis, to New Hampshire. Attorney Robert Katims, who is representing Parker, said the boy’s parents were on their way to Indi ana. He said no decision had been made on whether thetak AUS PI waive extradition. SeRlhope:- Tulloch’s mother,Diar ; 0 4h ei ‘ * a P told The Dar6noMt/j,astuiw lnt i^ lt be= paper: “We love our son an; P *' ' cx - the press to know that he): until proven guilty.” Half Zantop, 62, taugkal pes By Mined in Bjrd’s so™ ences. His wife, Susaitf?^ ot ^’ 55, was chairwomanoffe V° Studies Department. Botin uralized citizens who of Germany and Ira.* |ain ^ ,re 3,f n,1 y- . . , bill and m* Their slayings shocked) ■ er ~ . student Dartmouth campu| ^ surrounding communityof£ ia | t [ es p, Authorities have refusedknM nor j t j es motive or any connectiM:M, ll p S ^ the boys and the victims, a stabbed repeatedly. H^n fl a rtr Authorities said theybt Talton of F teens left their hometown! lidans on Vt., on Thursday and arJBainst the manhunt began over the vejB^i oppo Orange County, N 1 ’ tte.w everyl Dennis McClure saidthe w James 1 came suspects in the Dcfrom Jaspe case after authorities lee death behii had bought a military-si Three whit vie via the Internet. The t>: vk ted of i asked last Thursday to com awaiting e provide their fingerprin; serving lift they did voluntarily. If The full Arrest warrants for bod§s sued late Friday and early: l Thermal imaging questiow Clii NEW 0 ciission of i ad Interne Supreme Court to hear argument in marijuamutZ FLORENCE, Ore. (AP) — Nine years ago, members of a narcotics task force stopped in the early morning darkness in front of Danny Lee Kyllo’s house and scanned it with a thermal imaging device. The task force was investigating whether Kyllo’s neighbors were growing marijuana. When they trained the thermal scanner on Kyllo’s home, it showed indica tions of excessive heat. Based on that scan, electricity records and an infor mant, investigators got a search warrant to enter Kyllo’s home, where they found more than 100 marijuana plants growing under high-intensity lights. Kyllo contends that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated because the officers did not obtain a search warrant to scan his house with the thermal imager. He pleaded guilty to a federal charge, but reserved the right to appeal the search. On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral ar guments on his appeal. Though Kyllo faces only a month in jail if the high court rules against him, experts say the case is likely to bring out an important new definition of the legal limits fori unate tc bios on police searches of the most sacred of all privd With ab — the home. f 0rs ^ alhcr “In many ways, it is a question that isbotl ln £ the R' c and metaphysical,” said professor David Sdiu: ton’s rece University of Oregon School of Law. "Does audience o ner) take someone from outside (a home) and:convention in or take information from inside and take in ing ovation “If the government is free to use technology tel Larry El side our homes, there really won't be anything as a courag right to privacy,” said Dave Fidanque, executive: global trade the Oregon chapter of the American Civil Liber Democratic In its brief, the government compared the feuipreceder to a police officer watching a house from the I Ellison which does not require a warrant. this week’: “Thermal imagers do not literally orfigurali# etrate the home and reveal private activities U.S. Solicitor General's Office wrote. “Unli thetical sophisticated X-ray device or microplr could perceive activity through solid walls-® lions that would amount to searches — a thenr: ing device passively detects only heat gradients! rior surfaces.” Bush opens Oklahoma City museu OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — President Bush opened a museum com memorating the 1995 Ok lahoma City bombing Monday, imploring Amer icans to “confront evil, wherever and whenever” it exists in a nation vulnera ble to senseless violence and terrorism. “The presence of evil always reminds us of the need for vigilance,” Bush said in a solemn address. The emotional ceremo ny began with 168 seconds of silence — one second for each life lost in the rub ble of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. Only the whistling, wintry wind and the rippling of an Ameri can flag could be heard outside the Oklahoma City National Memorial Center, where nearly 1,500 people gathered less than 100 yards from the site of the worst act of terrorism on U.S. soil. A grim-faced Bush toured the museum, stop ping to hear a recording of the explosion from a near by building and the yelps of panic that followed. “Very touching,” he said of the tour. He signed his name to a registry, with the words: “God Bless.” First lady Laura Bush wrote, “With love,” and signed her name, too. Jeannine Gist, mother of one of the victims, took Bush into a room covered with photos of those who tt The pres ence of evil al ways reminds us of the need for vigilance. ” — George W. Bush president died, each picture accom panied by a memento from their lives. “This is my daughter here,” Gist told the Bushes, pointing to a picture of Karen Karr, who worked at a fitness center in the federal building. A business placed next to 1 to. “That was areal job — picking thing that represent body’s life,”she® Bushes shook the: sympathetically. The president sli walk away, but did' ble take at the « photo of Cindy Bro' had been marrief weeks to a fellow Service agent when! plosion killed her an other Secret Service! “We knew .some' agents here,” B no one in particulai gazing at faces oftfr His voice was 1 choked with emotie Summer Job! Applications are now being accepted for the College Station Summer Day Camp until March 7th Are you looking for a fiin and exciting job this summer that is both challenging and rewarding? Are*you a hard working, responsible individual that has experience working with children ages 5-12? If so, then the College Station Incredible Summer Day Camp is now accepting applications until March 7 th for both part-time and full-time positions. The camp is 11 weeks long (May 28-Aug 10) and offers a variety of games, art projects and field trips. There are two all day camps ages (5-8) and (9-12) and a half-day camp. Applications may be picked up at 103 Timber St. #4. Any questions call 764-5430. or log on to SCHULMAN ThEATRS College Park 1 www.schulman-theatres.05 : 2080 E. 29th St., Bryan 775-2«- BOX OFFICE OPENS MON. -THURST AGGIE OWNED & OPERATED THE WEDDING (PG13) PLANNER HANNIBAL (R) RECESS (G) SCHOOLS OUT SAVING SILVERMAN (PG13) HEAD OVER HEELS (PG13) SWEET NOVEMBER (PG13) DOWN TO EARTH (PG13) BEST MOVIE DEAL IN TOWN’ S5.S0 ADULTS - S3.50 CHILDREN/SENIORS/'"'' MOVIE ENTERTAINMENT FOR AGGIES SINtf 1 ’ k