The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 17, 2001, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Quantum Cow Tutoring 260-COWS
Sparks Building (Upstairs), Northgate (across from the campus post office)
LAE
SOLUTIONS
(Prelabs, Postlabs, Reports)
CHEMISTRY
PHYSICS
ORGANIC
BIOLOGY
TIJTCRIN6
TEST PACKETS
©IX TESTS
Acccunting
2C9/229
Billy's Vide©
Follow Our Step-By-Step
Instructions With Your #*51
Private tutoring: $ 10/hr
Discounts for small groups
A4M and Blinn courses
This Week In
Aggie Athleti
r*
L#
The week of September 16 - September 20
'Biol 113
^hem 101
£hem 107
^hem 227
*
|Econ 202
Pr. Alien
Jpcon 203
I^r. Nelson
peon 322
Dr. Nelson
JFinc 341
>Jath 131
^lath 141
»
NJath 142*
^laeh 150
t
r
-j£-
iilktg 309
ifaktg 321
Phys 201
l*hys 218
I
Part 1
Sun Sept 16
6pm-9pni
Part I
Sun Sept 16
6pm-9pm
Part 1
Sun Sept 16
9pm-12am
Part l
Sun Sept 16
9pm-12am
Part I
Mon Sept 17
8pm-10pm
Parti
Tue Sept 18
4pm-7pm
Parti
Mon Sept 17
lOpm-lam
Parti
Sun Sept 16
6pm-9pm
Part 1
Mon Sept 17
9pm-llpm
Part I
Mon Sept 17
7pm-10pm
Part I
Mon Sept 17
lOpm-lam
Part I
Mon Sept 17
5pm*7pm
Part I
Sun Sept 16
9pm-12am
Part 1
Tue Sept 18
lOpm-lam
Part!
Sun Sept 16
6pm-9pm
Parti
Sun Sept 16
9pm-12ani
Part II
Mon Sept 17
6pm-9pm
Part II
Mon Sept 17
7pm-9pm
Part II
Mon Sept 17
9pm-l 1 pm
Part II
Mon Sept 17
9pm-12ani
Part II
Tue Sept 18
7pm-10pm
Part 11
Wed Sept 19
4pin-7pm
Part II
Wed Sept 19
lOpm-lam
Part II
Mon Sept 17
6pm-9pm
Part II
Tue Sept 18
9pni-llpm
Part II
Tue Sept 18
7pm-10pin
Part II
Tue Sept 18
lOpm-lam
Part II
Tue Sept 18
5pm-7pm
Part III
Tue Sept 18
6pm-9pm
Part III
Wed Sept 19
9pm-l 1pm
Part III
Wed Sept 19
7pm-10pm
Part III
Wed Sept 19
lOpm-lam
Part III
Wed Sept 19
5pm-7p«n
mm,
Part IV
Thu Sept 20
9pm-llpm
Part IV
Thu Sept 20
5pm-7pni
*Come to Math 142 this week
and do not wait for next week.
There will be not be enough
time to repeat the reviews next
week.
Part II
Mon Sept 17
6pm-9pm
Part II
Mon Sept 17
9pm-12am
Tickets go
*
*
Check our web
Partlll
Tue Sept 18
6pm-9pm
Part III
Tue Sept 18
9pm-12am
■i
on sale Sunday at 5:00 p.m. 4.0 & Go is located on die comer of
SW Pkwy and Tx Ave, behind KFC next to Lack’s,
page at http://www.4.0andGo.com or call 696-8886{TUTOR)
News
Page 4
THE BATTALION
Monday, September 17, f
Americans pack churches iif
londay, Sept
response to terrorist attackHu
*1. 10
(AP) — Clutching patriotic flags and
prayer books, Americans filled churches
Sunday, struggling to comprehend the ter
ror of the week before.
“God Bless America” mixed with gospel
music. Images of the destruction in New
York and Washington flashed on some
sanctuary walls. Ushers in one church dis
tributed tissues to weeping parishioners.
Many ministers said attendance rivaled
that at Christmas.
“America will never be the same,” said the
Rev. Cecil Williams of San Francisco’s Glide
Memorial Methodist Church. “Never.”
About 250 members of the historic
Parish of Trinity Church Wall Street, in the
shadow of the World Trade Center, moved
services to a Roman Catholic shrine a block
from where the tw in towers once stood.
Trinity is now filled with ash and shards
of glass. Children were filing into the parish
preschool when the first plane struck
Tuesday. Stunned rescue workers staggered
into the church moments after the crash.
“Human words are inadequate, and so
we come together to turn to the word of
God,” said the Rev. Samuel Johnson
Howard, vicar of Trinity, an Episcopal
parish dating back 300 years.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral in
Oklahoma City, a block from the site of
the 1995 Murrah federal building bomb
ing, held special services, just as it did
days after the tragedy there.
In Alexandria, Va., the sound of
patrolling helicopters could be heard
above the Fairlington United Methodist
Church, two miles from the Pentagon, one
of the terrorists' targets.
The church was built for military families
stationed nearby during World War 11. A
white pentagon, representing the military
building, stood in one comer of the sanctuary.
At the Church of the Nazarene in
Augusta, Maine, a flutist played ”riie Battle
Hymn of the Republic" w hile images of the
devastation were projected on a wall.
Ministers saw lessons in the outpouring
after the collapse: to value family and
friends and be kind to strangers. The
attacks also posed a challenge, ihey said,
to stay hopeful when bitterness threatened
to consume the nation.
“God’s love and our hatred cannot coex
ist in our hearts,” said the Rev. Charles
hopes Americans will take solace
faith and reject hatred and violence
One of McCarrick’s relatives is mi'
in the World Trade Center wreckage.
Tyson Cobb, outside the Gk'.
Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles, v.
was troubled about responding to the car.
“Having three kids, it makes me
I don l want to perpetual
By JEREN
THE BA
angry,
and 11
Th
Episc
Kullmann of the Church of St. Paul the
Apostle in New' York. “Jesus came to save
all sinners, even terrorists.”
Deborah Welsh, a flight attendant or
hijacked United Airlines Flight 93, whicl
crashed in rural Pennsylvania, was a mem
her of the choir at the Roman Catholic
church. Choir members pinned pictures oi
Welsh to their clothing. The hymn aftei
communion was "America the Beautiful."
"It has been a bitter week for all of us.’
said the Rev. Paul Brooks, of First Baptisi
Church of Raytown, a suburb of Kansas
City. Mo.
Many pondered the war af
“As the father of four son
to sacrifice their lives for
And yet there must be a
wrong,” said Brad Sampson,
Mi
M;
Mi
^^hen last v
gab t New
Mexican Natic
>ostponed, it
etback for tb
k& ‘ I soccer te
he team a
yoiied its firsi
helseason bee
On Si
Austr
Roman Catholic Care
McCarrick. leading service
6.(XX) at the Basilica of the Shrine of the
Immaculate Conception in Washington, read
a letter from Pope John Paul II. saying he
head,
s. 1 don’t
this inju
want
slice.
Church. Cardi
cial Mass con
The pope c
nal Nasralli
ticmned fhe
.ih Sfeir. inn
"heinous cm
heart broka*
right tor
, who gall
;an. Utah,
nal Thee
kiofc
shared though)
that victims’ fai
urged restraint
is” to A met
in efforts to
iv.ms .md ns
1 tnnl comfarj
find the leras
for more
than
Before ihe |
pontiff arrr
.nl in FrosJ
Bh
f Ro
Wir
An
Security tightens at nation’s airport
NEW YORK (AP) — More scrutiny at airports. No coolers or
backpacks at baseball stadiums. More information-sharing with
law enforcement, with or without search warrants.
The suicide attacks on the nation’s landmarks have already
prompted some sacrifices of personal liberties. So far, most
Americans are accepting them in the interest of the common welfare.
But civil libertarians fear a creeping challenge to the freedoms
considered fundamental to the American way of life.
“We can very well accomplish ourselves what the terrorists couldn't
do on their own: destroy the United States as we know it,” said Lauren
Weinstein, moderator of an online privacy forum. “Even if we don't tear
the Constitution up explicitly, we can do it one piece at a time.”
Already at airports, passengers are facing tougher measures:
longer lines and more scrutiny at security checkpoints, non-ticketed
relatives further restricted from accompanying loved ones to gates.
Internet service providers and car rental companies have
turned over information to law enforcement — sometimes with
out search warrants, said Larry Ponemon of the Privacy Council,
which advises Fortune 1000 companies.
“Many of the:
»e organiz
at ions are <
:oopcral
ling in a via}
would never have
before," 1
Ponemon sa
lid. “Frc
>m the pure!}
tional level, you c
an underst
and why pri
ivacy is
being xuspc :.
Expect more :
surveillam
;e and acc«.
jee restr
ictions a»p':
events, concerts
and shop
pmg malls
. When
baseball ::ja
Monday, fans will no longe
packs or large bags.
r be able tc
> take al
ong coolen.
Expect more c
»ffice built
lings to res
a riot ao
cess to ihe fV
Freshman forw
Tulane Green \
Expect fewer places where individuals can truly remain jnon
— where they can pass without showing an ID or having a'
lance camera record their features.
For now. the constraints at airports and elsewhere are i
inconveniences. But civil libertarians fear the next step'
include racial profiling and X-ray machines that see
clothing.
Technology companies are pushing video cameras with
recognition software to match visitors with police databases,
systems are already in use. deployed at this year’s Super Bow
by the police in Tampa, Fla.
thr
Cameron Reynolds
Attorney At Law
Licensed by the Texas Supreme Court
Not Board Certified
Class of ‘91
Jim James
Attorney At Law
Board Certified Criminal Law
Class of ‘75
SPECIALIZING IN THE DEFENSE OF CRIMINAL N
CHARGES INCLUDING:
V
Driving While Intoxicated
All Alcohol and Drug Offenses
All other Criminal Offenses
979-846-1934
e-mail: jim@tca.net
website: http://jimwjames.wld.com
University Libraries
Poor Yorick's Trivia Contest
Question of the week: It was entered in a I 930 contest
by the Art Institute of Chicago. It won $300 for its painter and
was added to that institute’s permanent collection.
What is the name of this much parodied double portrait by Grant Wax
Instructions: Entry forms are available at the Circulation Desks in Evans,Annex,WCL:
PSEL One winner will be drawn from all correct entries submitted by 5 p.m. on Wednes:
Winner will receive a Poor Yorick’s coffee mug.
14 Takes Great Bread lb Make A Great Gandwlohl
Sandwiches & Salads Made To Order
Bread Baked Fresh Every Day
Desserts & Pastries
Coffee, Coffee Drinks, Espresso, etc.
Boxed Lunches & Sandwich Trays
PHONH IN YOUR ORDER & WEU HAVE IT WAITING!
Mon-8at: 7am-l1pm, Sunday: Closed
201 Dominik Drive, (979) 696-5055
^ * Df <*
TEXAS X
TEXAS
0237^5: ■
YOU
GtSStij CAN
www.l-800-GO-GUARD.com
^TfON
Welcome Back Students !!!
Le Nails
Special offer for new school year
$ 3.00 off regular price for artificial nail services
(Original prices: jWii.OO and 816.00)
* Free Paraffin w/nail services *
*30.00 Pedicure & Manicure
$20.00 Foot Spa
Start your new school year w/ beautiful nails
Act now! Don ’t hesitate!
Appointment and Walk-ins Welcome
Post Oak Mall (By J C Penney)
1500 Harvey Rd. College Station, TX 77840
693-0996
T
*\
Che