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 6 QoCden National Honor Society General Meeting Tuesday, February 27th 8:30 p.m. Koldus 110 Be* a TAAAU Exchange S+udenl" Immerse yourself 1 In Another Culture in “the XA/orld AAust - t>e O.S Citizen 1 TnformctT/ona/ Atce:T/ncjs 1 Isl- Floor Blzzell Hall Wesi", -4:00 p February 9, 12, 1-4, 16, 19 20, 21, 22, 23, 26, 27 f Aiarch 1 c/eac/Z/ne \ # Radio news from the newsroom of THE BATTALION campus and community news 1:57 p.m. Monday through Friday on KAMU-FM 90.9 College Station/Bryan West may see power problems Gas supplies tight, reservoirs are low LOS ANGELES (AP) — As Californians brace for a summer of anticipated power shortages and the possibility of rolling blackouts, experts are warning their neighbors in states across the West to be ready for the possibility of having to share the pain. Natural gas supplies are tight, reservoirs are low and a heat wave could drive up demand for elec tricity. “It could get bad all over the West this summer,” said Craig Pir- rong, a finance professor who spe cializes in energy markets at Washington University in St. Louis. “The likelihood of outages is still greatest in California, be cause that’s where the major defi ciency of generating facilities are. “But things over the entire West could be dicey this summer.” California has been coping with short power supplies for weeks and twice endured short periods of targeted or rolling blackouts in January. The power alerts were lifted last week, thanks to the availability of more imported electricity and the return to service of power plants that had been down for repairs. But energy experts predict the state will run short again, particu larly when air conditioners crank up in the hottest months. All the Western states share a power transmission grid, but the area most likely to face problems similar to California’s is the Northwest. Washington, Oregon, Idaho and western Montana depend heavily on hydroelectric power, an energy source facing a double challenge this year. MONDAY^ March 5th ^ 11 am-3pm,..Prize Patrol! Look for LDEXT !1 FE Q the golf cart to win prizes. .■VtCXMWKE, ANO IMtl'U l$M,Xi.VrMM* (*«< >«HAMJ* 6:30-7:3Opm.„ “It’s all the Rave’' Ecstaey Presentation in Rudder Theatre. CS o 0) TUESDAY. March 6th 11 am-3:30pm...GAME DAY! Located in front of Beutel Health Center. Look for bungee cord, sumo wrestling, human bowling along with Mix 104.7 7pm-9pm...Live alternative music from Linus at the Grove. O) WEDNESDAY* March 7th 1 lam~3pm... Fun in the sun at the MSC. Look for our Spring Break tips and more prizes. f THURSDAY* March 8th Beer goggle obstacle course. Look tor us all jLj . day between the MSC & Rudder. ; !>> Frisbees ■■■Mi ^ t/> TBIIICUTEM 0) r HctVe c* & Vuyt iweefel NATION — Monday, Febmar. THE BATTALION [onday, Febru £ Republicans review pardon House and Senate may combine investigation ejfi WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate Republi cans leading the review of President Clinton’s last-minute pardons said Sunday they may consider combining their efforts into a single investigation. “I think that is probably a good idea,” said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa. Added Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., “That’s something that we could look into.” Burton, chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, and Specter, who heads the Senate Judicia ry Committee’s investigation into the pardons, said they have not had formal conversations about the idea. Burton said on “Fox News Sunday” he would be hap py to talk to Specter. Congressional and federal investigators are examin ing the 140 pardons and 36 commutations Clinton issued in the final hours of his presidency. The investigations began with officials searching to see if fugitive millionaire Marc Rich or his family promised donations in return for his pardon. Federal prosecutors in New York now are investigat ing whether the former president commuted the sentences of four convicted swindlers in exchange for Hasidic Jew ish votes for his wife during her run for the Senate, a source has said. Also under scrutiny are a pardon and a commutation for which Mrs. Clinton’s brother Hugh Rodham received nearly $400,000; two pardons on which hercar;| treasurer performed legal work; and the possible: the former president’s half brother, Roger Clin; some other cases. At a Thursday hearing of Burton’s committee, of Clinton’s closest White House advisers are to appear: former chief of staff John Podesta, White House counsel Beth Nolan and former House adviser Bruce Lindsey. Also expected to testify is Skip Rutherford, ident of the William Jefferson Clinton Presidei brary Foundation. The committee wants access to the foundation list to check to see if any money came in that con!; been promised in exchange for pardons. Specter said on CBS’ “Face the Nation”tl. Senate Judiciary Committee will do its best not plicate what the House committee’s work, so‘to: nated efforts, if not a joint hearing, I think wot advisable.” Democrats cheered the idea as they attackedBi investigation. “A lot of people do not haveconfii necessarily, in the current structure,” said Sen. “ ry, D-Mass., on NBC’s “Meet The Press.” It’sbeec hunt after another.” “The process that is set up now is not fair. Let ns fair investigation," Rep. Chaka Fattah, D-Pa., saidoo! Tornado kills 7, injures dozen PONTOTOC, Miss. (AP) — A tornado killed seven people and de stroyed or damaged hundreds of homes around the city as violent storms swept through the region, au thorities said Sunday. A 2-year-old boy was killed by a tornado in Arkansas. The storms struck the region late Saturday but the full extent of dam age in rural northern Mississippi was not known until daylight Sunday. The twister cut a 23-mile path across Pontotoc County, the Nation al Weather Service said. The vast storm system that swept across the eastern half of the nation also dumped more than 20 inches of snow on northern Minnesota. Blow ing snow closed hundreds of miles of highways in Minnesota and South Dakota. Pontotoc County Sheriff Leo Mask said his office confirmed two deaths in addition to five people who were dead on arrival at Pontotoc Hospital, including a 10-year-old boy. Mask said it was unlikely the death toll would increase. In Arkansas, a 2-year-old boy died Sunday of injuries suffered when a twister destroyed the family’s home in Fulton County on Saturday. His parents and a brother also were in jured, authorities said. In Pontotoc, Johnny Seale held his wife close as their home was ripped apart around them. They survived but his 36-year-old son, a sister and a nephew were killed in houses only yards away. Wind damaged 10 to 12 houses in the Benoit area and a few homes in Leflore County. Hail the size of rparbles broke windows in the Bolivar County Courthouse, and county officials said wind up to 80 mph destroyed one rural house and ran canj ditches. On the colder side of the i about 260 miles of Interstate d closed overnight until Sundai^jlor short noon from (Ihamberlain,SJliflMlor. The Blue Earth, Minn. Stretches of ll Minnesota and North Dakotaa, r . of 1-35 in southern Minnesoo Iowa also were closed, authorite O Little Rock ARK. 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