Page 2 NEWS Tuesday, June 26.: THE BATTALION u esday, June 2 PlPTM flPES pm p.pPLunn Vou UJ/)/viTeD To /Isk Some Qoest(oa)5> Moot My F/q/wiEV L/F£, Doc ? Ses, Tell me? Is IT Co^TortAZV foR The Father To Have a a) r%\ AFFAIR UlWt 'iouR £ou$\a) ? A/VD X'AJ 6u£S5/a;6 A MlD6£T NEVER STolE Tout ? Please tell me You STuDIEb Some 7U!a)& OTHER THAN SPEWFEt To LEAR A) r-vi /^B^T pt HUM/)A/$/ Uias That not an Accurate Portrayal ? Hey UuMANf bo THAT THtNb Quaere they sleep our YouR UofRDS/ Group of teen beat homeless man to death www.rdeluna.com- The Fantastico Chronicles BY J. GOLDFLUTE PATERSON, N.J. (AP) — A homeless man was beaten and kicked to death by a rampaging group of teen-agers in an attack that has heightened concern over tensions between blacks and I lis- pnnics in this gritty industrial city. Hector Robles, 42, was at tacked shortly after police broke up a fight last week be tween blacks and Hispanics at a nearby high school. Witness es told police he was swarmed by black teen-agers who took his beer bottle and smashed him in the head with it before heating him to death. Eleven teen-agers have been arrested and all have been have provoked shock and< rage in New Jersey’s tit H ^inni :atio man; ing in their largest city- Nearly 100pet visited the heating site Sim for a candlelight ceremony, City leaders and resit have decried violence in once-thriving manufecte yelp and e? community 15 miles wet: New York. Hispanics aca; tor about half of the i49$Ul jositive ini] idents, while blacks mat; about a third. “We have 72 differentitie liable ethnic groupsinthistMrovides lo^ said city spokesman BobG.* V e, new he tvorld. Opp o give bad Christin; najor, volu: ty (HFH), it They kicked him like a dog? ‘For the most part, peoplt along pretty well.” .Melding so many din heritages can cause some sions, he said. There are“ nians and Serbs in this at don’t get along here mudi s : I “I got it ause my d; laid. “But luild hous Iranslator; I Cuellar eek with — Miriam Roble victim's sister ter than they get alongj )Ut „ grith. “The rel HECTOR Y PEDRO Adrian charged with murder and rob bery. “They kicked him like a dog,” said the man’s sister, Miriam Robles. “It looks to me like it was a racial thing. It was only blacks and he was Hispanic, and because he was Hispanic, they took his bottle of beer and cracked his head open with it and left him for dead.” Prosecutor Boh Corrado said prosecutors do not believe racial bias was a motive. “From what we’ve gotten, it hasn’t even been mentioned,” he said. Still, the slaying and the ar rests of the hoys, ages 15 to 17, homeland,” he said. Just before the attaci Wednesday, police broke ■J ecause 0 f fight between black and Hi: “You’ ic youths near John F. Ke High School. A group of youths later swarmed ana intersection and camel Robles, who had spent® the last 15 years hangingi |tressful.” HFH ui inds of pe v hich usua but also tc t he Electronic Transformer chuttmg and joking mih'' gljj ers who considered himfc L. Bf “He was screaming, ? > Oh!’ and moaning,’’; 1^4 6r Nathaniel Washington,^ i T ping clerk. “We all heardit 1 EE Bf ran out to his aid.” EE Robles was dazed andH 1 AC ing. 1 le was declared deads ’ ly afterward. 1 1^4 Ac C3- Testing Continued from Page 7 She said 20 to 30 percent of people who have HEWAIDS do not know that they have it. • “You can’t tell by looking at ! someone if they are HIV posi tive,” McClure said. “That is why you have to take your health into your own hands and be proactive about the choices that you make for yourself.” Kristi Hanle, senior case ■pianager for AIDS Services said it shocks some people to know that there are people in the B-CS area with HIV/AIDS. She said many people have the misconception that since the Bryan-College Station community is small, residents are immune to the threat of HIV/AIDS. “In the past two years, we have had more new HIV posi tives than in the entire history of this program,” Hanle said. “We currently have 107 active clients, but that changes often.” She said the AIDS Services have a few Texas A&M student clients, but most students who find out they have HIV return to their hometowns for treatment. If students, faculty or staff are not able to be tested Wednesday, the AIDS Services works with the Texas A&M A. P. Beutel Health Center to pro vide free weekly testing at the center. “We do free HIV testing on Thursday afternoons from 2 to 4 p.m.,” said Rhonda Rahn, health center educator. “It is completely anonymous. We set up the appointment, mark whether the person is male or female and then they just come in and get tested.” McClure said that the AIDS Services test from 200 to 400 people each month. Norwood Mosquitoes Bush Continued from Page 7 Continued from Page 7 Continued from Pc. Texas law professor Douglas Laycock said Monday’s ruling should have little impact be yond the Texas border. “Today’s order resolves nothing,” Laycock said, noting that in May, the Supreme Court upheld a decision allowing the use of race as a factor in admission to the University of Washington law school. A similar case from Michigan could reach the Supreme Court within a year. Monday’s decision did not rule on the merits of the state’s claims, he said. “Sooner or later, the court will decide this issue,” Laycock said. One of the plaintiffs in the original lawsuit, however, said UT should give up the fight. David Rogers, 37, recently graduated from Texas Tech University law school and is studying for the bar exam. Rogers said he wants to be a civil rights attorney. “They’ve been wasting everybody’s time and money for nine years and they haven’t won anything yet,” he said. “The U.S. Supreme Court has said, ‘Go away kid, you bother me.’ ” bites, Olson said that people should use insect repellents, cover as much skin as possible and try to avoid the peak mosquito time of dusk to 11 p.m. “The great contributors to the prevention of widespread outbreak from mosquito bites are air condi tioning and prime-time television,” he said. “Try to keep your outside activities limited to bright times of the day and stay in during those prime-time hours when nocturnal mosquitoes come out in hordes.” Olson also said houses may be made less attractive to mosquitoes by turning off lights because mos quitoes are attracted to ultraviolet radiation. If bug-zapping devices are used, put them away from the area they are meant to protect. “Bug zappers always attract far more bugs dian they kill,” he said. “As we tell people, if you don’t like your neighbor, buy him a hug zapper.” Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer said that,: vate meetings, Watts agreed to change a proft allowing religious groups to sue for damf they are denied government grants. Archers: also won assurances from Watts and Busin ers that only groups with a proven record®* services would be eligible for taxpayer fundi “I’ve been assured the legislation will tweaked, so the issues and concerns we’ve pressed will he addressed — removed orsaniS from the legislation,” Archer said. New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial, alsoal mocrat, said of Bush: “He sounded a veiyresif sive chord.” But the president, who has made this is* must-do priority alongside education leg® 5 ' and tax cuts, did not back away from hisassed that church-based groups receiving govern:?; funds should be able to refuse employing people outside their religion. “The president remains firm, so faras!^ in the ability of faith-based organizationstoi on the basis of religion,” said former India: - lis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith, an advi* Bush on this issue. Get plugged in at UNIVERSITY COMMONS, where every apartment will soon have access to Wireless T1 Fiber Ontic Lines . Wireless Internet Service is up to 7 times faster than DSL, and up to 10 times faster than cable modem. So you can hang out by the pool, or in the rec room and still stay totally plugged in. Plus, along with the most advanced wireless high speed internet service, we’ll throw in an incredible, ideally located, and affordable, fully furnished apartment with other awesome amenities... the BATTALK) Private Bedrooms Washers & Dryers • Hot Tub Decked-out Kitchens Wireless Hieh Soeed Internet / Fall 2001 Swimming Pool • Rec Room Comouter Lab • Alarm Systems Hop online and check it out today www.universitycGmmons.com. universiTY COMMONS apaRTmenTS the place for people like you... 950 COLGATE DRIVE / 764-8999 Jeff Kempf, Editor in Chief Jen Bales, Managing Editor Jason Bennyhoff, Radio Produ® Jessica Crutcher, Opinion Edit 0 ’ Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Ecfe: Bernie Garza, Photo Editor Stuart Hutson, News Editor Mark Passwaters, Sports Editor Brandon Payton, Webmaster Lizette Resendez, Asst. 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