1 2 Tuesday, November 19, 2002 The Princeton Review Bet for Scortta. Butter Behoofs Hyperlearning MCAT Classes Starting Soon! • 102.5 hours of instruction • Up to 4,300 pages of matet'ial • Specially trained ins ty'uctors - Five full-length pnectored practice exams - Guaranteed satisfaction Enroll early and receive a discount! www.PrincetonReview.com I 800-2Review _ c n» <>r M <•«/«/„ ** vjo"^ The Department of Residence Life at TEXAS A&M WANTS YOU TO BE AN RA (RESIDENT ADVISOR) Got Questions? Come to one of our Informational Meetings: TUESDAY Nov. 19 at 7:00PM in Rudder 504 WEDNESDAY Nov. 20 at 7:00PM in Rudder 402 RA Class Sign Up Forms are now available in the North Area and South Area Offices. For more information, e-mail Michael Gregorash at michaelg@housing.tamu.edu THINKING ABOUT LAW SCHOOL? Pre-Law Society Welcomes: Dean Sondra Tennessee From University of Houston Law Center Tuesday, November 19 MSC #225 7:00 p.m. Visitors are welcome! Fish OH A)o / /My iJOreRHLT IS bouJ/O ? CJHJT Art (s>o*jaJA bo? Houo GO'LL (AJ TooC H PEOPLE -M by R.DeLuna SEE , This isaj T So B4t>' Vou bov‘r TEEL rh ° ARCHAIC ,b° Vo" toisM rty IaiTeRmet STILL lOORKED So X > C xjL t> Look. Beernuts by Rob Appling Continued from | valuable information gaie te „ president. Th e ch J’ arrives to work an tn,!, the president and am,, the day, goes oven,„ ln lor . lh . e next % m assigning the p homework, Card said " M >' job is to ml !U the president has the tit J the job of presidentinalJ day," he said Die e chief of staff mu Fc HEY THERE! YOU MUST BE DUEY. AM3 TM DOCTOR BURRIS rM THE ONE THAT WLL BE PREFORMNO THE PROCEDURE determine who and who« see the president. Card system that is based 0 needs to see the comma;] chief and who see him. “Most people pretend; w ants are really needs ani job is to scratch away veneer and uncover Card said. 1 mayjusugi Duke Continued from page 1 “We need to achieve closure on this situation, and (the perfonoance review) is the best way to do so," said Hammond, a senior marketing major. “This will reaffirm our confidence in Chris, or it won't." Duke declined to comment Monday. Duke contacted Corpus Christi police shortly after midnight on Oct. 8 and said he had been approached that afternoon outside his College Station apartment by a Hispanic man with a gun. The two got into Duke's pickup truck and the assailant directed Duke to Corpus Christi, he said. There, Duke reported, they stopped at a quiet park ing lot and he passed out when the man pointed the gun at him. Duke said when he awoke, his laptop computer, cash and credit cards were missing. College Station police said they noticed inconsis tencies in Duke’s story. When police questioned Duke about the incident, he decided to obtain an attorney after confronted with problems in his story. At a second interview Oct. 18, Duke, with his attorney present, admitted the story was false. Bonfire Continued from page 1 Duke threw away his credit cards but was not robbed of any property, police said. This is the second time an MSC leader has faced the possibility of removal after public revelations of bad behavior. In 2001, Josh Rowan was removed as MSC president for inappropriate con duct during a University-sponsored trip to Italy. Rowan was accused of excessive drinking and making unwanted sexual advances to another stu dent on the trip. The MSC, with an annual budget of more than $6 million, is one of University’s largest student organizations. The recent scandals plaguing the MSC leader ship will not blemish the organization’s prestige and standing in the A&M community, Hammond said. “The MSC will be remembered for how it responded in difficult times,” Hammond said. A special performance review committee, com posed of both students and MSC senior staff, wi conduct the inquiry and make a recommendation to the MSC council. The council will then decide whether to impose any sanctions. There ige foott icre is f< “1 basi Isa way lg»” sa ’d lopped la lowboys jvorite p Fantas (lows ga jams fro ayers. 1 jam’s su sNFL p tj Gamer Ich othe “Fanta jterest ir |eek,” FI Once | [her, the k pickin irticipai Dan V iris St£ 0 leagi a week p NEWS IN BRIEF Bin Laden Continued from page The speaker on the appears to refer to thekil; a U.S. diplomat in Aue Jordan, on Oct. 28, the a recent event noted in the script. Whether bin Laden 1 Qaida had a direct hand attack is unknown. U.S cials said. The speaker also pra several more terrorist a: by suspected Islamic mil between April and Oc including the bombing nightclub in Bali, Indone; Oct. 12. that left close to! people dead, and the CM takeover of a theateti Moscow, in late Octobei Previously, the last etta evidence bin Laden wasil recorded on Nov. S,K he had dinner vitll deputy, Ayman Zawahri, his spokesmans others. A videotape ofcsf was recovered by U.S.fej Walco,m Afghanistan and lai?-' internationally, -j Late in December, of bin Laden statement aired. He appeared gatint sibly wounded. There- 5 | tape suggested ‘i in late Novemte 3 ! December, but was when chief Defer Crow< SYDNP accused Crowe 0 Monday prosecut and wror Police H tape in the filmed early - could not be certain. of the classes who never experienced any part of the tradition that has been on hold since 1999. Joel Neuber, a senior and former member of the Corps of Cadets, was at the Polo Fields the night Bonfire fell. Neuber said that during his time as a Fish Camp counselor, he saw that even the members of the current senior class, the last class to participate in building Bonfire, didn’t know enough about the tradition. Justin Fountain, a senior member of Company E-2 and mechanical engineering major, said like many Corps outfits, E-2 upperclassman used the anniversary to teach underclassman what Bonfire was like. “We are bringing under classman out to tell them what it was like,” Fountain said. One student, whose black Bonfire pot was adorned with Of Sarge and the words “Tough and Tenacious,” open ly wept as he faced the 12 white crosses. In the middle of the crosses, where Center Pole would have stood in 1999, a white pole stood above the crosses with a Bonfire pot hung over it. Search for man who fell from airplane continues Training Wan men HOUSTON (AP) While Hying about 9,GOO feet over the Prairie View area, a Houston man copiloting a sin gle-engine aircraft plunged from the plane as it was making a steep turn. Federal and local authorities told the Houston Chronicle for its Monday editions that the 45-year-old Houston man, whose identity was being withheld pending notification of next of kin, apparently jumped or fell to his death Sunday afternoon, about 20 miles northwest of Houston. The pilot told investigators noth ing seemed unusual about the man. Kremmer said there was no indi cation the man had a parachute. Continued from student leaders of the Bonfire as a professor ! Agricultural Education mint where he taught ship development c before taking the reside P ° S “Everyone mourns and brutes Sf,re in differ.^ Some choose to n wedding cakes inexact^ of the Bonfire because v _ Aggies are fanatics, said. “GOT (international) JUSTICE?” Come learn how the proposed international courts will affect our nation and our soldiers abroad. WILEY LECTURE SERIES Memorial Srooewr Center November 20, 2002 7:00 PM in MSC 201 THE BATTALION Brandie Liffick, Managing Editor Sommer Bunce, News Editor Sarah Szuminski, Asst. News Editor C. E. Walters, Asst. News Editor Kevin Espenlaub, Sports Editor Dallas Shipp, Asst. Sports Editor Kendra Kingsley, Aggielife Editor Marianne Hudson, Asst. Aggielife Editor Jessica Crutcher, Editor in Vhief ]ifeE Thomas Ph.Uips, Assf^. George Deutsch.Op'ni^ Brieanne Porter, Asst- P Elizabeth Webb, Copy C ' John C. Livas, Photo ^ Alissa Hottimon. o' 0 ^ Ruben DeLuna, Graph-* Diane Xavier, Rad.o Prod-«r Surp Not Pro£ diate expe Pros nolo cust for c Not Proj have Rees Winstead, Webmaster Aggielife - Jay Arnold, Heather Campbell, Nishat Fatima, Lisa Merryman, Lizette Resendez, Kelcey Rieger, Lyndsey Sage, Denise Schoppe, Lycia Shrum, Brian Sykes, Mike Whitlow, Erica York, Emily Vincent Design/Copy Desk - Julia Bone, Tiffany Canfield, Lindsey Fielder, Emily Hendrickson, Ryan Hewlett, Shilpa Jain, Nicole Steen, Rhonda Weinberg Graphics - Rob Appling, Josh Darwin, Angelique Ford, Sarah Fowler, Jon Fullrich, Lori Green, Leigh Richardson, Mandy Rouquette, Jeff Smith, Travis Swenson News - Amy Adams, Eric Ambroso, Lecia Baker, Brad Bennett, Sarah Darr, Rolando Garcia, Melissa McKeon, Jeremy Osborne, Rob Phillips Esther Robards-Forbes, Lauren Smith, Melissa Sullivan, Sarah Walch, Kimberly Weatherley Staff Members .„ 0 rii>nn Radio - Mike DeiaHoz, KnsJ ^ Opmon - Lindsa y A i e c 0 |i Ennen.Col^ Castillo, Jamie Drff, Fr anck,^f Ezeanyim, Sara F° ley ' h Leeje- 1 ^ f ’ Fried, Chris J H a . cks0 R; iean ne porter, M'« la Matthew Maddox, Brieanne fox, walsh, SgogTS - Jeff Allen ’ Mi || er David Gary Livingston TW J' e p ebe || 0 , Carme Newsroom.Clerks p z jess« ^^NeKimbrough, Ben Reinecker, Janelle Varg as D n[ia Bern), ^ ADVERiismo - Me "^ a att B S r BollingerLag Michael Bingham, Matthew Jim ^ Lindsey Scoggins, Jason Amanda Whittier THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday throughand ^J.% ters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session t“ c ®P „ po stMASTER: Send ao Texas A&M University. 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