I J L GIG THIS! Awesome Specials — Awesome Fun Pepper Tree Apartments College Station 693-5731 - 2701 Longmire If You Have Something To Sell, Remember: Classifieds Can Do It Call 845-0569 The Battalion SHOP HASSLE FREE VARSITY FORD www.varsityford.net NO SALESMAN UNTIL YOU NEED THEM! HIGH REBATES ZERO INTEREST LOANS COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAMS TRUCKS, MUSTANGS &c FOCUS SPECIALS! (Questions? E-mail us at s a 1 es @ va rs i ty fo rd. net) Quizno's SUBS IN NORTHGATE I IO COLLEGE MAIN 846-7000 ; WE ACCEPT AGGIE BUCKS! •as Open: I I am-8pm welcome AGS!! THIS COUPON GOOD FOR i $ l .00 OFF ANY SUBi ■, i \ Offer good at our Northgate and Bryan location. / Not affiliated with the Texas Avenue Quizno’s 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 CRIMINAlT 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 J 1 WOLF PEN CREEK A Perfect Place to Call Home Located in the prestigious Wolf Pen Creek area. You’ll appreciate the easy access to Highway 6, Texas A&M, shopping, dining, and entertainment. Our goal is to provide quality housing and we regard service as the foundation of our business. 0 Full Size Washer/Dryer 0 Microwaves 0 Covered Parking 0 Patios/French Doors 0 Balcony Storage 0 Nine Feet Ceilings 0 Intrusion Alarm 0 Ceiling Fan 0 Business & Fitness Center 0 Sand Volleyball Court 0 Waterscaped Pool 0 Conveniently Located & Lease SPECIAL! No application fee! 301 Holleman Drive E College Station, TX (979) 694-5100 2 f\o° x T Monday, June 17, 2002 Jack N R.DeLurva HEY 5PEAJCER., b'D You SEAH> YoUK. I>At> For. father's Day? My Thinks Because. I Have P\a) i/^a6(a;akY Take RoAT>. 'ioo The Uioh "surely You CA/J SPE4CER tore mauled SEaJT VoJ A oF H/Al 6BTT/aJ(, gV RABI £> t>o65-- Beernuts by Rob Appling COMEON OUEV WE'RE SOMMA TO A BAP WHERE THEY TREAT DRUNK PEOPLE WITH A LITTLE MORE RESPECT!! STUPID DRUNK COLLEGE KIDS AND THEIR STUPID DRUNK DOSSH .. | E RE OUT LIKE A FAT KID IN DODwEBAU ^Adrian MAYBETf^" CAN ALSO SET RID OF SOME AGITATORS" FOR ME Library Continued from page 1 new system,” Yang said. “They will see the many benefits of deliverEdocs and it will save them more money and more time later on.” Rec Center Continued from page 1 river pool are more popular, and the sand volleyball courts are as busy as they are in the spring, although many choose to use them later at night to avoid the afternoon sun and heat. If not currently enrolled in either summer session, A&M students who want access to the Rec Center are presented with the Continuing Student Membership option, for a fee of $39 per summer session. “This system is up and com ing and is the future for universi ty libraries worldwide,” she said. Users can register through their email account where their information will be secured. Unlike previous Interlibrary Loan systems, deliverEdocs eliminates the need to key in This is only available to those students who were enrolled in the spring and will be again in the fall. The mem bership fee does not include aer obics classes, rock climbing, towel use, and massage therapy. However, Hall did include there are one to two free aero bics classes a day, and towel use is free with a locker rental. There are several programs underway for the fall, which will begin either at the end of the summer or before the start of the fall semester. There are also plans for tiling personal information for every request submitted. Thursday there will be a demonstration to promote sign up with deliverEdocs at Evan's Whitley Recognition Suite, located on the first floor of Evans Library from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. the outdoor pool, as well as expanding the weight room and improving maintenance and repair around the facility. Construction on the outdoor pool was *scheduled to begin in early summer, but administra tors at the Rec felt this was unfair to students. It will cost an estimated $30,000 to delay the project but Hall felt it was worth it for the students, he said. All those not able to use the Rec Center throughout the sum mer can begin using the facili ties around Aug. 15. THE BATTALK Charged Continued from page] Thompson was not ant when he was released from hospital because the invest tion was still underway police did not have a warrae his arrest, Sigler said. While the investigation: tinned police found evkfe which potentially could! led to a warrant for his an Sigler said. Justice of the Peace Pat Meece set Thompson’s bat $200,000. All three charge- second degree felonies; each carries a punishmet two to 20 years in prison at $10,000 fine. A trial date has not yeite set, Sigler said. Honor Continued from page! Nautical Archaeology (INA This nationally respe- institution has gradii: become more internatic: with recent sites in Jam; Egypt. Portugal, andlurke “The working relation between INA and A&M been excellent and very c since the beginning," Doominck said. Bass also noted that Ai has been extremely helpful his arrival in 1976. “I was particularly thrilH see President and Mrs. Bowe: my family’s table at | National Science Foundati celebratory] banquet," Bass>;:! Bass has received mime grants from the Naii Geographic Society, the Nan Endowment for the Human: the National Science Found, and many private founda: and individuals. “I think I have the laK number of National Geograp| Society grants than anyone it history." Bass said. Since his retirement in7 he has continued to partiri) in excavations. Bass is currently woife? Turkey excavating a sixth-: ry B.C. shipwreck, the that period ever excavated Mediterranean. “I am talking to a publi: about a coffee-table book Texas A&M’s underw archaeology around the w and have a scholarly work press at Texas A&M Press, with a second voli almost completed,” he v “Maybe I'll write my menu one day.” FAF — A n U.S. < halfwa and sti trying i Cha two of becam< Nickla: first tw the yea ry Sum Nex ride: Muirfu “I j one,” V are ea: tough.’ He putt bo that qi shots. ] the res i-ce Mixed-income housing draws spotlight during Bush trip to Atlanta ATLANTA (AP) — When President Bush praises the Villages at Carver on Monday, one resident wants him to know that she thinks the neat lawns, fresh paint and secure buildings of the new mixed-income community hide an injustice. The Villages replaced a 990-unit housing complex called Carver Homes as part of a national push to repair troubled public housing tenements. For people who can afford the high rents, all it takes to move in is an application. For former Carver Homes tenants, the process NEWS IN BRIEF can be a lot more challenging, and that, 47- year resident Louise Watley said, isn’t right. "The poor aren't making it back. They're only letting in seniors or people with decent jobs," Watley said. FBI referrals of terrorism cases for prosecution up six-fold since Sept. 11 WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI has been seeking prosecution of international terror ism cases at six times the rate it did before Sept. 11, but more than half of those cases considered by federal prosecutors never made it to court, Justice Department records show. In the year before the attacks on Me 1 York and Washington, FBI agents sent international terrorism cases a month t U.S. attorneys for prosecution, according the records obtained by Syracu- University's Transactional Records Acce Clearinghouse (TRAC). In the first s months after the attacks, they sent 59 month. The records reflect the intense FBI w on anti-terrorism investigations after Se: 11, but they also show prosecute declined to file charges in 60 of anti-terrorism cases they considered last October through March. The prosec tors did not reach a decision during period on all of the more than 350 cast referred to them. IMMANUEL & HELEN OLSHAN TEXAS MUSIC FESTIVAL ft JUNE JUNE 24, 2002 MOORES SCHOOL OF MUSIC UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON TICKETS! 845-1234 Student $5 - Regular $10 Around the World in 30 Days! 'jltmpxre” Monday, June 17, 7:30pm Chamber Concert Bush Conference Center Includes Kodaly's Andante; Bartok's An evening at the village & Slovak Peasant's Dance; Schoenberg's Lieder, Op. 2; Janacek's Sotiata for Violin and Piano; Mahler's Lieder, Fruhlingsmorgen, Erinnerung, & Hans und Grethe; Smetana's Piano Trio in G Minor, Op. 15. bother with parking when yon can walk to TAMU’ FTuge 1 bedroom floor plans - Only 2 blocks from T A A4U -12 month leases starting tit ONI. Y $ 410. 00 Casa Del Sol 696-3455 recent former rampai among letes rr coffin “Amer Ain team c player mer al Camin the int< might into ha sports The many i THE BATTALION E>ouglas Fucntes, F,ditor in Chief ^ ters an^Moni/lt^ihrniloifn If ! >u t >li stied dally. Monday through Friday during the (all f^ periiXl* : Texas A&M University "A'f during the summer session (except University holidays ahtj f 1 Changes to The Ban^ion ?fv d,Ca 7..? Staee Paid at College Station TX 77840. POSTMASTER. Seno New*. T» „„ , tt ' Texas A&M Univer s!ty. 1111 TAMU, College Station.TX 77843-1111. l# - iS. ftimt oM < J,e n Den\ d Zfr e f n f ' S ma ," agod students a ' A&M University In the Division phone: 845-3313 Fax B4S ofiL c° Urr !f lisrn Nnws O,,icos i,ro ln 014 Reed McDonald Building AHv„ rt , r.t IT 845 -2647; E-mail: newsroomOthebatt.com; Web site; http://www.thabatLC pus local and'nadona’i'af* ' ,dve :tislng does not Imply sponsorship or endorsement byThe Batta o fees are Tn Oi l Rena ^ adved 'slng. call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. A 26l: * McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax. « R?e OaUaAon^FIrsffnnv'r!!!'’ S '!!f en ' Servi t ; es Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up ‘LgJ^ortW 6 or spring semester sY? no copies 25 * Mail subscriptions are $60 per schoolyesL Disccue 1 American &pmls catl 84! 2611 SUmmer ° r $1 ° a m0nth ' To charee by Vlsa ’ MaSterCa *' V- ft