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Jit $ 1.00 witches brew ALL NIGHT! r l ” Doors open at 8:00p.m. M LIVE Charlie Robison w/ special guest Bonnie Bishop Doors open at 8:00p.m. $ l.50 Mixed Drinks 1 $ l.50 Longnecks / 8-1 Opm Check out Harry’s website at www.bcsclubs.com Fish I'm So Excited/ Jvt AJEVER boA>e The Hallo^E-EaI THlAlfy AS ^ looPLE ! r meaai, Can A/vy of Tne 6*£ATS' TAfLZAN Aisjd 5ANE ! BonniE A/ud CL-ibE! BuPPy A Atv, f-f ou’s IT CoaaiajC* .over there ? by R.DeLuna OH yeah, floner's Really. OoMAiA THESE S£ HERE www.rdelunaTcom Beernuts by Rob Appling WHATCHAUPTO? I'M FIXIN'TO LEAVE FOR CLASS, BUT I CANT THINK OF A CLEVER AWAY MESSAGE FOR MY INSTANT MESSENGER. . HMMM HOW ABOUT, "I'M AT CLASS- NO, NO, NO .. I NEED SOMETHING THAT IS ORIGINAL AND FUNNY, BUT STILL SHOWS THAT I DON'T CARE IF PEOPLE M ME OR NOT.. LIKE A WITTY OBSERVATION, NSDE JOKE, OR SOME OBSCURE QUOTE FROM A REDMAN SWOLE REDMAN. HUH? HOW ABOUT, 1 BAILED OUT TO CAUVMTH COUNTERFEIT BCLST? WELL,THATS OUSCURE ENOUGH. BUT IT REALLY DOESN'T DO IT FOR ME COMEDY VASE HOW ABOUT, "MY DOO SAYS I OOTTA / LEAVE OR ECU- SOt. TEC RUG " / WOW/ THATS A REDMAN SONOT7 ITS PERFECT I! U.S. military building database of terror suspects’ biometrics bad guy that we can. (AP) —The United States is compiling digital dossiers of the irises, fingerprints, faces and voices of terrorism sus pects and using the information to track their movements and screen foreigners trying to enter the country. Since January, military and intelligence operatives have col lected the identifying data on prisoners in Afghanistan and at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. There are also plans to extend the col lection process to Iraq in the event of a U.S. invasion. , With this project, the U.S. government has taken biomet rics — the measuring of human features — well beyond its most common use to date: verifying people’s identities before giving them access to computers or secure areas. “We’re trying to collect every biometric on every bad guy that we can,” said Lt. Col. Kathy De Bolt, deputy director of the Army battle lab at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., where the Sniper Continued from page 1 federal case,” McNulty said. It is also unknown whether a federal prosecution would begin before or after state prosecutions. During a brief hearing, Muhammad said he understood the charges against him and another court appearance was scheduled for Nov. 5. Outside court, James Wyde, the chief federal public defender in Maryland, urged the public to withhold judgment until evidence is heard. “Mr. Muhammad is a 41-year-old father,” Wyde said. “He was an American who served in the Persian Gulf. He was honorably dis charged. He has never been convicted of biometric tools being used were developed. “Any place we go into — Iraq or wherever — we’re going to start building a dossier on people of interest to intelli gence. Even if they get released, we have face and voice clips. When they come into one of our checkpoints, we can say, ‘You’re this bad guy from here.’” a We're trying to collect every biometric on every — Lt. Col. Kathy De Bolt deputy director of battle lab at Fort Huachuca In biometrics, optical, ther mal and audio scanners are used to record a person’s features. Mathematical algorithms are then used to reduce that infor mation to digital data. Some biometrics are more reliable than others. For example, the intricate patterns in the iris, the colored part of the eye, are con sidered better identifiers than even fingerprints. The U.S. biometric system, known as the Biometrics Automated Toolset, or BAT, includes about 50 laptop com puters equipped with scanners. The information on suspects is stored in a central database at a U.S. intelligence agency — De Bolt declined to say which one — in the Washington area. An additional 400 laptops are being prepared for a possi ble Iraq invasion, said Anthony lasso, a software engineer at Northrop Grumman Corp. who leads the project at Fort Huachuca. So far, BAT data has been shared with both the FBI and the Immigration and Naturalization Service to help check the identities of incom ing foreigners and of foreigners arrested inside the United States, officials said. another crime at any time, anywhere.” He said Muhammad is accused “of an incom prehensible crime, one that had a profound impact on our community and has destroyed the lives of the victims and their families.” “What I’m asking you to do at this point is to wait for the process to work,” Wyde said. The affidavit details evidence found in the 1990 Chevrolet Caprice in which Muhammad and Malvo were sleeping when they were arrested at a Maryland rest stop last week. The items include a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle police have linked to some of the killings and a cotton glove stuck in a hole in the trunk. Authorities believe the sniper shot victims through the hole while lying in the trunk. Virus Continued from page 1 precautions for themselves as well as their hunting dogs. Although Gayle said a dog has a better chance of being hit by a car than becoming infected with the disease, at least four cases of dogs becoming infected with West Nile encephalitis have recently been reported in Louisiana and Illinois. Immune systems that are not working properly can also con tribute to the infection in dogs, Gayle said. “We need to protect dogs like we would protect ourselves,” Olson said. If they are indoor dogs, keep them indoors as much as possi ble when mosquitoes are active. If a dog becomes unstable while walking, then becomes coma tose or has a sudden decrease in appetite, take the dog to the vet erinarian, Olson said. He said there is no vaccine for dogs and he does not recom mend using a repellent approved for humans on dogs. Gayle said owners need to also take precautions for their horses by keeping them protect ed with vaccinations and repel lent and reduce their exposure to mosquitoes. Gayle said he thinks the dis ease will continue to be a threat as long as mosquitoes still linger in the area. “The number of cases will decrease as more horses and humans are exposed and become immune to it,” he said. i new! TH E BATTalioJ Planners Continued from page] campus,” she said. “W e add buildings and still p plenty of green space.” ^ Miller said the p| believe adding to main cam would be more convenient students. She said a con« about West Campus is fo, feels more like a business p than a community. The final product, or “de enables” will be finished ^ next summer, Abrams said. “There are two products «J have asked them for," said. “A blueprint of the t highlighting where nett ings might go guidelines for the decis making process.” Dennis owns hisownfu Boston and is one of th campus planners in thecoi Abrams said. She said Dennis has recently been involved in pus planning at the Universiti JlMSA) comp Southern California. pevents in an c Dennis’s personal Wehsii (arc h i t ec t u re. mi t. edu/people/BC /CV-dennis) lists several simili projects he has worked wij including Cornell Universitj,! the University of Miami uii Carnegie Mellon Universit) 1 . Barnes, Gromatzky and Kosarek is an award-wini| architectural design firm basd in Austin. Abrams said. According to the Web sitilCenter on Oc Barnes, Gromatzky and fa laid he espec has experience with five oirei| Expressions universities including giirchitectmal University of Texas at Austin j|^ ( l' t l u ' ^ cc; institution similar in sizet A&M. The firm received it Annual Achievement Avail from the American Institute it Architects in Austin in its master plan of the Tea School for the Deaf campus. Thro By 1 IF “I knew ah Jdidn’t mean n It was importa Jpiesented in I an(1 ^ set Ri c ky Tu major. ”1 had Islanding of th Let to know tl laces ot Islam plot of Aggie late the Muslii [having events The Musli standing aboi Awareness W opened with ; buffet on Oct jspeeches cow i and an MSA w speech entitle false witness neighbor” fre Muslim scho Maghraoui ir Aerospace Continued from pagel the usual spe' “The presi [esting becaus architecture a around the w |was a step av topics of the [different aspt jtures and the enhanced the Arsalan H MSA and a g puter science of this nation w The need for engineers in defense and computer indust has had the biggest effer research and the commcfl aerospace industry. Lagoudas said the Ar commercial aerospace indti needs engineers to keep it W falling behind European comps tors such as Airbus. “We haven’t lost our dot nance yet, but if we dont ’ something soon we will behind” he said. The commercial aerospK decline, said Dr. John L. Jut George J. Eppright chair and# tinguished professor Aerospace Engineering A&M, is due to Airbus and European companies relic'®: billions in government subs# while American comnieK* aerospace companies, s Boeing, are unsubsidized. Duke ^ l ' inthet Continued from pag el t ; conduct during a Um v ^| sponsored trip to Italy I was accused of drinkme much and making un " . sexual advances to another- dent on the trip. ^.ffiriiltll * Calling the matter a ]yj g complex personnel J Hammond said any proceedings against D accord with the MSC co tion and policies. The Princeton Review Better Scares. Better Schools Hyperlearning MCAT Classes Starting Soon! 102.5 hoars of instruction Up to 4,300 pages of maten.al Specially trained instructors Five full-length proctored practice exams Guaranteed satisfaction Enroll early and receive a discount! www.PrincetonReview.com | 800-2Review THE BATTALION Jessica Crutcher, Editor in Chief Brandie Liffick, Managing Editor Elizabeth Webb, Copy Chie Sommer Bunce, News Editor John Livas, Photo Editor ^ Kevin Espenlaub, Sports Editor Alissa Hollimon, I hoto ^ Kendra Kingsley, Aggielife Editor Ruben DeLuna, Crap ^ Richard Bray, Opinion Editor Diane Xavier, Radio to Rees Winstead, Webmaster THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday lhrough ^^51 fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday clL l rin ®. t1 p r j 0( jicalsP osta ^ (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University^ ^ Battalio 11, Paid at College Station, TX 77840. 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