1 mw •vr;rr fifflifflasaffl Career Center Texas A&M University 2002 Employer Workshop Series The Company Visit A must for students preparing for an on-site visit and job interview. Learn acceptable protocol and much more! Monday, March 4, 2002 7:00 p.m. 601 Rudder Steps to your Success! 845.5139 209 Koldus http://careercenter.tamu.edu WHY WOULD ANYONE PAY MORE? CALL FOR LOCAL DIAL-UP NUMBERS. No Contracts! Not Pre-Paid! Billed Monthly! FREE Unlimited E-Mail Accounts FREE 300 Megabytes of Web Space No Busy Signals - Unlimited Access & Usage FREE 24hr Tech Support & Software 56k or ISDN - Same Low Price Everyones Internet T h WWW.GVl.nGt for complete details Additional fees apply. See our website for complete details. Monday, March 4, 2002 THE BATTjU Fish by R.DeLuna Top 20 Have You fve/? /Vo Tic ED How VtoFLB 5rAAJD/v6 AT A CRo*S UJALK U/’tLL TosT 5 TART UALKIAJ6 IT they see ELSE UjAlKt/Vk ALKI/V6 Sos*^Oa/E'S' t Air X .meaa^, They Doaj't EVEa; CHECic The siga; ! they t check the traffic! They s^t assume th£ Guy UAUoaJO ^yuows WHAT H&S &OIAJCy i C Continued from paj “This is not race-ba plan would reward I work of students andei pool of academically ( economically disad^ students.” In their December b the Regents gave cor approval to the top } asking for more reset' information. A&M officials W StUC CAMPUS CALENDAR Monday, March 4 TAMU Roadrunners are having daily runs M-F 5:30pm. Meet in front of Rec. All skill levels welcome. Contact Chad at 764-8637 for more information. Monday, March 18 TAMU Roadrunners are having daily runs M-F 5:30pm. Meet in front of Rec. All skill levels welcome. Contact Chad at 764-8637 for more information. Thursday, March 7 TAMU Roadrunners are having daily runs M-F 5:30pm. Meet in front of Rec. All skill levels welcome. Contact Chad at 764-8637 for more information. Thursday, March 21 TAMU Roadrunners are having daily runs M-F 5:30pm. Meet in front of Rec. All skill levels welcome. Contact Chad at 764-8637 for more information. Attorney General John Ml; to advise them on ihef.jli move to not consider tit ■ plan for this fall sa\e> |1 who is running for fe^BDouble- Senate to till the seat v acated by Sen. Phil Texas, from making mendations on the pi Officials remain commuted first-generation Fr Baptist Student Ministry will host The Normals in concert with Inside the Outside at 7 pm in the Baptist Student Center. Call 846-7722 for more information. M-F Monday, March 25 TAMU Roadrunners are having daily run 5:30pm. Meet in front of Rec. All skill levels welcome Contact Chad at 764-8637 for more information. likt age Ion tin i d from Bonfire Continued from page 1 from the north side of campus and allow for proper drainage when rainstorms occur. Contractors created a mound over the stack site but will not be digging in that area, Sippial said. The dirt will be removed from the center pole site and dispersed throughout the Polo Fields once construction nears an end, he said. After receiving phone calls from the mother of Dominick Braus, a Corps of Cadets mem ber who was injured in the 1999 Aggie Bonfire collapse, Sippial said Physical Plant employees went to the Polo Fields and marked the site where center pole stood with a stake, Sippial said. The unadorned Bonfire pot now hangs from that stake, a tes tament families left behind to the lives lost in an Aggie tragedy. “Basically, the Bonfire site will be intact when this con struction is through,” Sippial said Sunday. ”1 understand why people would think that area shouldn’t be disturbed. I’m real ly sorry that it happened. We thought that it (construction) wasn't going to go over that far but unfortunately it did.” Planning for this phase of construction has been in the works for about five years, he said. Construction should be complete by October or November. Cranes from the construc tion, similar to the ones that were used to lift logs from the tumbled Bonfire stack two and a half years ago, stood silhouetted against the lights from campus Sunday night in much the same position they would have been the morning of Nov. 18, 1999. Student Body President Schuyler Houser, a member of the panel that will judge Bonfire memorial designs, said the construction will not affect the placement of a Bonfire memorial if one is to be built on the Polo Fields. “This construction doesn't have anything to do with chang ing the land.” Houser said. “They're not tearing this up to impede putting a future Bonfire or a memorial there.” said. Britts M Grades Continued from page 1 “1 don't see how given the complexity of the system you could go beyond three,” Blasingame said. The class restrictions, Blasingame said, would be set at three to prevent abuse of the system. Constant exploitation could cause a student to hit the state mandated limit for undergraduate hours of 175. After reaching that limit, students must pay out of state tuition. While a grade would be removed from a student's record under grade for giveness. the physical hours would remain. “I don’t know how that cap is going to bite into this,” he said. Other Texas universities, such as the University of Texas and Rice University, apply the same policy toward grade averaged as Texas A&M. A grade forgiveness plan would help students who are trying to succeed, Blasingame said, hut would not save students who's grades are at a large deficit. “You could not salvage a sinking ship with grade replacement,” he said. oil i But all RThis Ix-I coriptilsi\L ^ Some n Who lu\c I' §> not thin ■I) not hr man psychi jpfcne w ith ■"1 usu think a bo I mj friend extent of i take medi the sympn the medi bee ime w c lid The Ob- Fbundatmn a partieula jiPts ahold go. ()bsess COinbmatio fignnot ese; COtnpuKioi certain "n attempt to Obsessions. PauleN s behind her "1 am Said. ”1 e,i Constant 1\ Scald inn v Baby falls to y AT. AA.T* . ,,, fr 0111 311 til ATLANTA (AP) - month-old boy died when he fell five stone balcony at a downtar police said. Hunter Neal MM wandered out on *1 floor balcony of tffii room at the Omni I slipped through the i police spokesman Quigley said. The toddler fell fourth-story roof, He died at a hospital She i? Carol sister A set uf Bi 'rial men in Page’ t State Ban) NEWS INBRie Pauley police j Satchel’s NORTHGATE 260-8850 Across the street from Tradition’s Dorm Monday/Tuesday Lunch Special Monday Noon • Tuesday Noon Chicken Fried Steak . w/ Flinch Fries or Baked Potato 9 5 0 your choice & Salad 5 Vegetable Plate Tutor Joint wee Icly classes & tutoring for MATH & PHYSICS (class sizes are lititited) 485-8556 w/ *1.30 longnecks all day, everyday Aggie Card welcome! Free Parking behind Shadow Canyon. www.tutorjohn.com 1701 Southwest Pkwy., Suite 101 College Station Ani'MLentors Texas A&M faculty, staff and administrators helping students. Division of Academic Affairs Executive VP and Provost Office Ms. Nancy Sawtelle Ms. Eva Maddox AulmLssions Counseling E>r. Frank Ashley Ms. Rebecca Harbaugh Ms. Rebecca Hapes Mr. Shay Harman Ms. Kim Jenkins Ms. Cara Presley Ms. Angela Rankins Allensworth Mr. Mickey Saloma Mr. Michael Spies Food Safety Inspection Services Dr. Tony Brown Ms. Shirley Hammond Athletic Department Mr. Mike Caruso Dr. Claude Gibson Ms. Nancy Small Special Event Facilities Ms. Mary Helen Bowers General Academic Programs Mr. Russ Graves Ms. Laura Wimberly 12th Alan Foundation Mr. Nick McGuire History? Dr. John Lenihan Dr. Anthony Stranges Journalism Dr. Douglas Starr Ms. Shelia Ward Graduate Studies Dr. J. Rick Giardino Texas A&.M University Relations Mr. Gerard Farrell Career Center Ms. Marti Boerema Mr. Daniel Orozco Mr. Matthew Upton Ms. Samantha Wilson Center for Academic Enhancement Ms. Tricia Bugajski Mr. Chris Calvin Ms. Shelley Christie Mr. Joe! McGee Ms. Catherine Toler Honors Program and Office of Professional School Advising Ms. Valerie Buford Dr. Edward Funkhouser Ms. Karen Hudson Ms, Manda Rosser Ms. Karen Severn Texas Agricultural Extension Dr. J. Reynaldo Santos Texas Sea Gran t Mr. Mark Evans Measurement and Research Dr. David Martin The Association of Former Students - Publications Office. Ms. Ann Duyka Modern and Classical Languages Ms. Norma Arisqpe Dr. Victor A.risr.pe Mr, Tom Baker Mr. Antonio Caraballo Dr. Richard Curry Dr. Nancy Joe Dyer Ms. Nina Morris Research and Graduate Studies Dr. Michael Buckiev Security and University Police H. Allen Baron L.t. Bert Kretzscbmar Philosophy' and Humanities Dr. Richard Stadelmann Political Science Dr. Vesna Danilovic Center for Teaching Excellence Ms. Jean Eayne Dr. l.Ac. Miller Dr. Nancy Simpson Ms. Danyelle Garrett Other Departments Vice President of Administration Human Resources Col. Don Curnbie Speech Communication Ms. Susan Gilberts Agriculture Program Ms. Edith Chenault College of Ciberal Arts Computing and Information Mr. Don W. Carona Dr. Victor Frysinger Mr. Keith Marrocco Mr. Buzz Refugio Bush School of Government and Public Service Ms. Christine Cremer Anthropology Dr. Vaughn Bryant Dr. Wayne Smith Dr. Shelley Waehsmann Un derg t a dua te A dvis ing Office Ms. Terri Burger Educational Broadcast Services Mr. Rick Howard Texas A&M Foundation Ms. Lynn Dodd Ms. Cathy McWhorter Dean's Office Ms. Becky Jobling Ms. Diane Linn Sterling G. Evans Library? Ms. Lori Salter Luza English Dr. Donald Dickson The ASVMe.ntars Program consists of approximately 370 Texas A&M faculty, staff, and administrators who volunteer extra office hours to make themselves available to students. Mentors names will be appearing in the Battalion throughout the week. For more information on these and other Mentors check out the ATMentors website at: http://mentors.tamu.edu Want to get a jump on Spring Break romance? Looking for that special someone? hat’s YOU ^ Pick-UP Line???^ 3 SlMPL Join -rvr for a fun night of dating insight! s is your chance to go on '20 elates (3 minutes fl n one evening! Then hear an expert explanab of dating’s hidden messages. March 6- Rudder 20 1 7pm-9pni Tickets are $5 at the MSC Box Office Get I For more information call Conversations at 845-1515 ore-mail conversations@nisc.tainu.edu 845 1 515 THF RATTAT 10 11113 D/v 1 1 iYJL/IU •It's A C midte has 7 it a Hr and tc Mariano Castillo, Editor in Chief [ appam I-Golf ■ I today- L 845 ~ Open to- campus— for more The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and sptb ters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and examr Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: SeM : changes to The Battalion, Texas A&M University, 1111 TAMU, College Station, IK 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division:': Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed McDonald Building. phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: newsroom@thebatt.com; Web site: http://www.tlieb3tt.cF Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalios : pus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569 *." offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax:8*: Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a sing; The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 254. 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