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Students: The weather is changing; why not change your look by trading your specs for contacts, or trying out the new colored lenses'? Ask us about our student specialsl ACUVtJE ? MV P»SIOT*CYIOM” Ac/taoc #>»£ th* Socrrce ©/ Sifcht bother with parking when you can walk to TAMU? - Huge 1 bedroom floor plans - Only 2 blocks from TAMU - 12 month leases starting at ONLY $ 4m. op Casa Del Sol 696-3455 www.rent.net/direct/casadelsol Texas A&M Univers ty Dr 9 Church St eg Z O'! CTO S 3 5' GO © Cross St Casa Del Sal c nt He.v/w. t AM V!oV' ,c< 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. I 9 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 Wednesday, November 20, 2002 Oscar-winning actor Coburn remembered as ‘hippest of hii LOS ANGELES (AP) — James Coburn’s intense smile could switch from cheerful to menacing with the slightest nar rowing of his eyes. That enabled the gravel voiced actor, who died of a heart attack Monday at age 74, to play a wide array of characters, from the gruff mountaineer in the kiddie comedy Snow' Dogs to his Oscar-winning perform ance as a violent, alcoholic father in Affliction. Cobum’s breakthrough per- fonnances came in 1960s action flicks such as The Magnificent Seven, Hell is For Heroes and The Great Escape. He then changed direction and found what was for decades his greatest fame: portraying tongue-in-cheek secret agent Derek Flint in the late 1960s James Bond spoofs Our Man Flint and hi Like Flint. But while they remain cult favorites, the Flint movies did n’t afford him the status and respect enjoyed by other con temporary “tough guy” actors such as Lee Marvin and Steve McQueen. His role as Glen Whitehouse, the violent drunk in Affliction that Nolte’s small town cop feared becoming, brought him his only Oscar. It was a role he savored after years spent recovering from the near-crippling arthritis that impeded his career. “He enjoyed every day of it and never complained and always acted like he was the luckiest guy in the world.” said Paul Schrader, the screenwriter and director of Affliction. “Some of them you do for money, some of them you do for love,” Cobum said of the film. “This is a love child.” Coburn had recently com pleted two films. The Man From Elysian Fields with Andy Garcia, and American Gun. in which his character travels the country in search of his daugh ter’s killer. Garcia described Cobum as “the personification of class, the hippest of the hip.” “With an extraordinary level of artistry and a trend-setting flare, I will always look at our time together as a great privi lege,” Garcia said. “He was of that ’50s genera tion,” Schrader said. “He had that part hipster, part cool-cat aura about him. He was one of those kind of men who were formed by the Playboy/ Rat Pack kind of style.” Cobum was bom in Laurel, Neb., on Aug. 31, 1928. and grew up in Southern California. He made his stage debut oppo site Vincent Price in a La Jolla Playhouse production of Billy Budd. He appeared regularly throughout the 1950s in such James Coburn’s lasting legacy James Coburn died Monday after suffering a heart attacka - home in Beverly Hills, Calif. A versa;" actor known for playing gritty, ; c - characters won an Academy^ for his supporting role irTAffcr He was 74. Selected filmography 1960 “The Magnificent Seven’ 1963 “The Great Escape’ 1965 "Major Dundee” 1966 ‘Our Man Flint" 1967 The President’s Analyst' 1973 “Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid' 1979 “GoldengirT 1990 “Young Guns II" 1994 “Maverick” 1996 “The Nutty Professor" 1998 “Affliction" 2001 “Monsters, Inc." 2002 “The Man from Elysian Fields' SOURCE Associated Press TV Westerns as Wagon Train. The Rifleman and Wanted: Dead or Alive. His role as knife-throwing Britt in the epic Western The Magnificent Seven was his first big breakthrough. Other notable works included The President’s Analyst (1967). Goldengirl (1979). and the Sam Peckinpah films Major Dundee (1965) and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973). He worked steadily through the ’90s, appearing in such wide-ranging fare as Young Gnus II. The Nutty Pro;'® The Cherokee Maverick. He also prwii \ nice of corrupt comp® Heniy J. Watemoose 111: sear's popular animated; dv Monsters Inc. Cobum and his wife. Pi were listening to musics;: Reverb Hills home onM :: when he had the heat a said Hillard Elkins, then longtime friend and tea manager. Plans for a memorial set remained incomplete Toe - Man under NASA scrutiny may have jumpel HOUSTON (AP) — A man w'ho appar ently jumped from a single-engine plane at 9,000 feet was the target of a federal inves tigation involving the theft of NASA tech nology, authorities said. Russell Edward Filler, a 47-year-old engineer for a NASA contractor, became a suspect when federal authorities traced a NASA laptop computer to his home. The computer disappeared Oct. 25. He was contacted by federal authorities Thursday. On Sunday, Filler went to Hooks Airport because he needed more hours to renew his pilot's license. Filler turned the controls of the single engine Cessna 152 over to his flight instructor, then asked him to turn the plane sharply so he could get a better look at the ground. Waller County Sheriff Randy There was tio accidental exit from the aircraft. — Lt. John Kremmer Waller County Sheriff's Department Smith said. Smith said Filler then opened the cock pit door and unfastened his seat belt as the plane flew over a rural area about 45 miles northwest of Houston. The instructor looked away for a moment, and when he looked back he saw Filler's feet going out the door. Filler’s body has not been found. Filler told authorities last week that he bought the computer for $500 through an ad posted in a grocery store, said Harris since test In respi column Meteors draw enthusiastic audience Texas set to exec* convicted cop Tuesday night HUNTSVILLE, Texas j murder AP — Amateur and profes sional stargazers alike were treated to a spectacular light show early Tuesday as meteors blazed Technicolor trails across the night sky. Most of Europe and many parts of North America were obscured by clouds, but it was clear enough at Raleigh, N.C., that Debbie Moose and her hus band, Rob Vatz, saw 20 to 25 meteors in the 45 minutes or so that they stood outside in the freezing cold. “Some were little pinpoints, but some were really bright, like flaming golf balls,” Moose said. The celestial display was the annual appearance of the Leonid meteor shower, caused when the Earth passes through a trail of comet debris. But this year's show came from two unusually dense trails on one night. It will be nearly a century before the Leonids, usually one of the year’s biggest displays, produce such a big swann of shooting stars again. “They were bursting like six Even though I know what’s causing it, it’s like a little hit of magic. 99 — Debbie Moose meteor shower observer at a time in different colors,” said Linda Mora, one of about 40 peo ple who fortified themselves against the cold with sleeping bags and blankets at Paradise, Texas. “I was so excited I didn’t feel any cold.” The temperature was only 18 degrees at Flagstaff, Ariz., when Phil Massey, an astronomer at the Lowell Observatory, went out to watch in the clear mountain air. “I thought it was spectacu lar,” he said. “All professional astronomers are really tourists when it comes to meteor show ers.” The annual shower occurs when the Earth passes through the trail of dust left by comet Tempel-Tuttle, which swings around the sun once every 33 years. The dust grains, traveling at 158,000 mph, glow and vapor ize as friction heats them up in the upper atmosphere, producing streaks of light. The Earth intersects those debris trails each year in mid- November, but this year it crossed two unusually dense trails, laid down in 1767 and 1866. That produced two peaks of meteors during the night, one over Europe and one over North America. “Even though I know what’s causing it, it’s like a little bit of magic,” Moose said in Raleigh. The Earth is not expected to strike another stream of equal density from the Tempel-Tuttle comet until 2098 or 213 1. The Leonids are named for the constellation Leo that marks the direction from which the meteors appear to an ive. County sheriff's Capt. Robert Van Pel Van Pelt said Filler turned onthtrL puter anti saw that it had somenonsfl® live NASA software on it, but computer. Filler admitted he L' [ computer was stolen. Van Pelt said | ’ "cr worked for United 1996 in the contractor's*^'- ix.-M and verification group. ground testing lor the internatioa station. J, Waller County Sheriff’s Depart^ John Kremmer said officials arenoj cially calling the tall a suicide, ® was no accidental exit from the air® Federal officials inspected the Wi but found nothing wrong wim its I door latch or with the seat belt. . L A ^ er I he investigation and the se J C |ated’’ hiuly were continuing, authonties ^ efend r. Dec ■ Tobe ent fi there w co use _ and l ’hUNTSVILLE, Texas Wan aver Condemned murderer ; p, e -set1 Ogan disputes the ar-*ost-se that led him to death j pragmatic about his • I ■1 killed a cop a™d*l Texas," he re “^ (eI ^ nothing to hide. I vene trvine to cover up. .. a positi Tgin faced lef ^ ol pos, Tuesday evening to * e . shower shooting death ofj £1 „ al att police officer, James ,i gunned down Astrodome. ^ A M tral att percep even " A5 O fi O a d n 0n T7 would Sg convicted killer put to ^ IWatk year in Texas and the t^ n g an< on consecutive night h^.charac "A lot of people say annoui Texas they really Li c favorii penalty a lot anvw;v Texas tney „ id L ? —■ ■■ penalty a lot sa ' di ^ anywa' Stand ley, one ° f teC jOf * Fev attorneys whopros^ u, ments "But I truly believe'f 5 hat ^ ment, W illdothat to a cop 0# use as just think of What they f el | tQ to just anybody else. Said Ags Helping Ags Move Their Life! MOVING & STORAGE 979-693-6233 • No Suprise Pricing • Guaranteed Pick-up and Delivery Dates Interstate Agent for //_^ * Licensed & InSUted Atlas. 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