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UCS promotes a healthy lifestyle by sponsoring a vari ety of sports events, offering free on-site gym and hir ing only non-tobacco users. Come start your career with a winning team! EOE. To apply, please submit resume or visit our website. UCS, Inc. Attn ad #1313 200 Quality Circle College Station, TX 77845 595-2613-fax UCS Shane Daniels, a sophomore business major, and Jeff Shaefer, a junior industrial engineering major, ride If Viper at Six Flags Astroworld in Houston this weekend. Newsf hot v\ DALLA Id news| alias Me killed f'eries earl) ! Randal Jng a new laundry ir orhood as shot Witnes led the rown or Future remains for Texas military base < s Hass with I Investi I ing may h JHa robber) |»said Bord JBtwo rouh regular di Smoke ire sh THE WAY IT PLAYS OUT ^Wednesday - closed In observance of T Thursday Cover *3 00 * PLAN B * TjFriday - * closed * ^Saturday - * jibe * - with LINUS Cover $ 5.00 Where real musicians play! 201 W. 26th Street, Downtown Bryan 775-7735 WASHINGTON (AP) — With Kelly Air Force Base closing its doors next month, many other Texas communities with military installations are wondering if their bases, posts and depots could share a similar fate. Those who have watched lexas’ military presence diminish from its Vietnam War heyday are squirming. While few think the state is immune from future closures and cutbacks, some say there is room for mili tary growth in the state. Recent examples include a proposal to consolidate the Air Force’s B-l bomber operations in Kansas and Georgia and move some of them to Dyess Air Force Base in Abilene. Meanwhile, the Navy has said South Texas is under consideration as a site for naval bombing training exercises now conducted on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. “Texas has some unique opportunities for the military to maintain and consolidate new missions into Texas,” said Bill Ehrlie, chair man of the Texas Defense, Aviation and Aerospace Alliance. “There are some attrib utes the state has regarding geography, air, space, land use, environmental, all of which are very favorable to the state. On the other hand some of the other states have similar circumstances and situations.” The alliance is a volunteer group advo cating Texas’ military, commercial and gen eral aviation and aerospace industries. Texas’ geography, terrain and weather conditions have made it a logical place for military posts throughout history, said Joseph Dawson, a Texas A&M history pro fessor and former director of its Military Science Institute. “As the military expanded, especially af ter World War II, Texas presented a near ly perfect place, especially for flying, there- u Any time BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure) is mentioned, Killeen, with its dependency on the mili tary, takes a deep breath.” — Roy Wolfe president of Greater Killeen Chamber of Commerce fore the state benefitted,” Dawson said. But when military cuts come, Texas is more hard hit, Dawson said. Fort Flood in Central Texas is the nation’s only Army post capable of supporting two full armored divisions. Community leaders wince at renewed talk of Pentagon cutbacks. “Any time BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure) is mentioned, Killeen, with its de pendency on the military, takes a deep breath,” said Roy Wolfe, president of the Greater Killeen Chamber of Commerce. One of the Texas military’s strongest al lies in Congress is Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchi son, who has said she would not support an other round of base closings until the Pentagon has assessed its troop strength TFXAS needs and can show base d()sure>;Hg 0 t 0 ff t 0 yield cost s.n mgs. I western si She said construction and moderns t ics at Texas bases should help the® of another BRAC is premature, shesa til the Pentagon completes itsstratcr view of the American military. “I think the president’s budgetij- some key strengths to the bases tit: know are part of our core responsii" the military. And 1 think in thisreirirs et we are going to add significantly'- about every base in Texas,” Hutchisoca “I think if there were anotherffiC: we would be in very good shape. 11 utchison’s i n fluence haskmi since she lost her chairmanship^ itary construction appropriation;# tee when Republicans lost theirs®' 1 in the Senate. I lutchison said she has a good ret: the fire t ship with Sen. Dianne Feinstein,D-i were ho the new committee chair, and saidtk scattered bas e some eonmu >n \ lew s on theftt derstorrn Rep. Mac Thornberry, a member area Mon 1 louse Armed Services Committee, with I lutchison that constructional A light ternoon \ ing a mar night anc ing on G< just north sula, the! vice said. Smoke is drifting western Vista and Dickinsor Clear Lak duced in Channel, The isl by boat, fighters ai bases will make them harder to scrip. . But Thornberry, R-Clarendon,sai; fense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’stes ny last week to the committee pert; him that the military has too much structure. Rumsfeld said the additional $18 requested for the Pentagon budget mostly be spent to fix problems andJ compute help modernize the military. back onl clear exc Napsti SAN j Napster's as offl orked ti music i ustomer Napstt PIZZA paPflJOHiist ® Better Ingredients • Better Pizza Monday Special •m ¥ I firm l Topping Pizza li/Ulllli Every Monday Tuesday Special I A nrr l Topping Ptas ^ IMbtd Lunch or Dinner no limit Pick-up only Pick-up or Deliver IMorthgate Post Oak Square Center Bryan 601 University Dr. 100 Harvey Rd., Suite D 3414 East 29th St. 979-846-3600 979-764-7272 979-268-7272 Radar station targete in airstrike on Lebano SARIN TAHTA, Lebanon (AP) — Israeli warplanes struck a Syrian military radar station in Lebanon on Sunday, wounding three people, as the government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon aimed to punish Syria for Hezbollah guerrilla action. Hezbollah quickly responded to the raid, firing rockets and mortars Sunday at Israeli mili tary positions in disputed terri tory along the Israeli-Lebanese border. Israeli artillery fired back, wounding a farmer, Lebanese officials said. This was the second time Is rael has targeted Syria’s presence in Lebanon in retaliation for a significant Hezbollah operation since Sharon came to office this year. Sunday’s tit-for-tat attacks marked a sharp escalation along the border, which has generally been quiet since the withdrawal of Israeli troops from southern Lebanon in May 2000, except for incidents over a still-contest ed corner of the boundary. Two Israeli fighter jets fired two missiles at the Syrian radar position in Sarin Tahta village on the main road between the towns of Zahle and Baalbek around noon Sunday. Israel said the strike was in retaliation for Hezbollah fire that injured two Israelis on Friday night. “It’s been destroyed,” said a Syrian soldier, armed with an AK-47 assault rifle, as he stood guard about 200 yards from the targeted position. He would not give his name, journalists were not allowed to get any closer to the site, so his claim could not be verified. Two Syrian soldiers were wounded in the air raid, Lebanese security officials said. Syrian soldiers on the scene said their comrades suffered shrap nel injuries to the arms and legs. A Lebanese soldier was also wounded, a Lebanese military official said. The soldier was hurt while standing guard at an adjacent position, according to a witness. The Sarin Tahta radar is one of many radar, tank and anti-air craft positions that the Syrian army maintains in Lebanon. Syr ia has had a force of some 2 5,000 troops in Lebanon since 1976. In Washington, White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said the State Department was in contact with all sides and was “urging the parties to exercise maximum restraint.” Lebanese Foreign M| Mahmoud Hammoud 7 attack confirmed Tsrai gressive nature” and cy the United Nations to stop to Israeli airstrik spoke on national tebis In Cairo, Arab Leagt rctary-General Amr | condemned the airstrip ing it added “a darkiitt current developments t future.” The Israeli Cabinet^ statement in Jerusalem' the radar station was 2* Sunday because Syria( sponsible for Friday’s He: guerrilla raid that wound Israeli soldiers in the( Farms region. “This criminal acti< I lezbollah takes placeuai authorization of Syria, 1 army has a preseS Lebanon,” the statemei T he army said it “willnoi ate” Hezbollah attacks. Hezbollah has pledj continue fighting Israel! vacates the Chebaa Fart The territory is part Golan Heights, whicb occupied from Syria. 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