ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH • GIRLS CLUB OL BRAZOS COUNTV 1 BRAZOS ^GO 1805 Briarcrest 776-0999 Come ion the fun! 1/2 PRICE OPTION EVERY THURSDAY CURRENT SCHEDULE new HOOKS OPEN ISTTO MDSESSON LOWER PRICES luodjT 5«PM hi PM NOSE Wdnaii MP.M MPM MPM BINGO lUif MPM Hs PM MO PM MAGIC 2000 Mir MPM TiliPM MPM Smiv MPM HSPM MPM Suit' MPM MPM MPM ELECTRONIC MACHINES Non-SmokingArea • Dow Prizes • Creal taxi • Secuiily • Pull Tabs amt Much More! Over Awarded Weekly LITERACY VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA VARSITY FORD www.yarsityflm.com Check out our specials on Focus, Mustangs, & our entire stock of Trucks Call rate, rebate, and inventory information is-updated weekly) PRE-OWNED SPECIALS ARE CHANGED WEEKLY College Grad and 1st Time Buyer Program for Internet Users Questions? - e-mail us at ross@varsityflm.com orship Directory Cathode fEpiscopaC St. Mary’s Catholic Center 603 Church Avenue in Northgate (979)846-5717 www.aaaiecatholic.ora Pastoral Team Rev. Michael J. Sis, Pastor Rev. David A. Konderla, Associate Pastor Campus Ministers - Deacon Bill Scott, Deacon David Reed, Martha Tonn, Maureen Murray, Jill Bludau Daily Masses Mon.-Fri.: 5:30 p.m. in the Church Sat.: 10:30 a.m. (Korean) Weekend Masses Sat.: 5:30 p.m. (English), 7:00 p.m. (Spanish) Sun.: 9:00, 11:00 a.m., 5:30, 7:00 p.m. Confessions Wed. 8:30-9:30 p.m., Sat. 4:00-5:15 p.m. or by appointment. St. Thomas Episcopal 906 George Bush Dr. • College Station, TX 696-1726 Summer services - 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Next door to Canterbury House, the Episopal Student Center Presbyterian Christian FIRST RESBYTERIAN CHURCH Helping Aggies grow in faith New Summer Hours: Sunday School 9:00 a.m. Worship 10:00 a.m. 1100 Carter Creek Parkway www.fpcbryan.org United Methodist First Christian Church 900 South Ennis, Bryan 823-5451 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Robert D. Chandler, Minister A&M United Methodist 417 University Dr. (on Northgate) • 846-8731 Church at 8:50 & 11:00 College Sunday School 9:45 Sr. Pastor Dr. Jerry Neff am-umc.org CCD'VS COLLEGE STATIONS #1 LANIT CELL COLLEGE IMITE I I11 M V SC cent EAE DRINKS 75 cent LCNGNECKS 8-11D.M. 1§ + NO COVER CEAECE Hil l COLLEGE l.l , f DID/iy & SAIDDDAT $1.00 E4E CLINES & LCNGNECES TILL 11 I.M. OVER 21 UNDER 21 NO COVER NO COVER WITH COLLEGE I.D. WITH COLLEGE I.D. $3.00 Without $5.00 Without OUR DRESS CODE IS CASUAL BUT WE NEVER ALLOW JERSEYS OR ATHLETIC APPAREL DRESS CODE IS DOORMANS DISCRETION Texas Avenue @ Southwest Pkwy. (Next to 4,0 & Go) 694-0(118 Page 6 NEWS Thursday, May 31,2001 THE BATTALION I like to do drawings n Cam Fisk force! arts« |/\ 20-memb< j’lit )Uiline the init , ar ce the arts ■ornmended ■M establish ■y for the p< isi al arts." ■The propo vluld attemp ulding and o ■forming and ■ms both on < Iff he task for tK lish Profess K recommen illccation to ai ■nent of arts ■rvey rar ichitectu Using a pencil as a guide, Kerry Beckett, a junior environmental design major, ANDY HANCOCK, 1 m BaTTaU works on a drawing of the Langfoi Architecture building for a class. BN national ‘ Mon" surve ■0( architectu kSlM's Collegt ■h among pi ■aroducing Bel on the jc ■ he survey, Banac of An Bt 2001, inqi From which 5 ad the best e mployees?" S to < Prosecutors ask jur] for death penalty in 1998 bombing trial odeo set Five memb k&M Univers vill compete 200,000 doll nppey at the Ttodeo Fii Vyo., june 6- Bhe tean ieorge Strait McCallist and I. D. NEW YORK (AP) — Backed by testimony from grief- stricken relatives, federal prose cutors asked a jury Wednesday to condemn two men to death who were convicted of mass murder in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa. “Justice is not done yet,” As sistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald told jurors. “Each of you will be convinced in the end that the only just punishment that does justice for the victims is the death penalty.” Sue Bartley—whose husband, the U.S. consul general in Nairo bi, Kenya, and son were killed — later took the wimess stand. “There isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t think about my loss es,” Bartley said as family pho tos flashed across video sefeens positioned in front of the jury. The testimony came op the first day of a penalty phase in the trial of Mohamed Hashed Daoud Al-’Owhali, 24, of Saudi Arabia. A separate proceeding s jury found the defentL, two other men guilnf Paso • the Vug. 7, icsBy prid Ml paso (/ 30 people plotting bombings in Nairobi andD: Salaam, Tanzania, killing There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think about my losses.” people, includi Prosecutors si ordered 12 Americ the bomb 'dhy in El were Osama ‘ide parade — Sue Bartley wife and mother of victims will follow for co-defendant Khalfan Kliamis Mohamed, 27, of Tanzania. Defense attorney David Baugh pointed at Al-’Owhali and told ju rors: “That young man will either he killed by you, or he will spend the rest of his life in prison in a country diat is not his own.” On Tuesday, the same anony- i i . -i ^TV Ssaid He lF Laden, the exiled Saudi nulli 5s < 0 f r j aire and reputed leaderofthc.; "| t was rnc Qaeda terrorist organization Jy' Genevie' Only Al- Owhali and arming coo hamed could face the de P c;50 Times. penalty because of their dir l f or us involvement in the bombin.lit'We're c Al-’Owhali rode in the bom: More thi hauling truck in Kenya, "Pats and or Mohamed helped build the Art in th< zania bomb. *cle Day Pa No sentencing date hashed peac set for co-defendants Wadih D Wntown s 11 age, 40, of Arlington, Tee Spectator and Mohamed Sadeek Oi'^fwished 36, of Jordan, who could been Ic life in prison. A rn< •Ve been Jess they B "I don sdy for this treed to eother citi ition."