10
STATf
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Friday, January 17, 2003
THE BATTALION
Overturn
of sodomy
law urged
body drench
litchell
. essentinls
back to basics
creative nail
and morel
College Station
2050 Texas Ave S. Suite A
next to Old Navy
979.694.2683
Beauty Store & C'olor Salon
www.beautyfirst.com
[college station
student housing
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS FOR FALL 2003
The Cambridge@College Station, the newest and most innovative
student housing serving the Texas A&M community is proud to
invite student leaders with a strong commitment to community
service, to apply for the Resident Assistant position.
/0B DESCRIPTION
• Desk Shifts
• Administrative Tasks
• Plan Social, Educational and Recreational Activities
• Minor Maintenance Tasks
• Policy Enforcement
• Crisis Intervention
• Peer Counseling
• Numerous other Services
COMPENSATION
Rent Free Room and Full Meal Plan
REQUIREMENTS
Full Time A&M University or Blinn College Student
2.5 Overall GPA
Sophomore or above
At least 19 years old by August 2003
Have previously lived on campus or in a student community
for at least one semester
No pending discipline issues
Students who meet the above requirements should complete
an RA Application available at
The Cambridge@College Station Leasing Center,
501 University Oaks, C.S.
Deadline for applications is Monday, February 3, 2003
HOUSTON (AP) — A gay
rights group on Thursday filed a
brief with the U.S. Supreme
Court urging the high court to
overturn Texas’ sodomy law in
the case of two men charged with
having sex inside a home in
1998.
Lambda Legal, which repre
sents the two men, and several
other organizations have asked
the Supreme Court to declare the
state’s anti-sodomy law unconsti
tutional.
“Some of the most diverse
and respected voices in this coun
try are lining up to tell the
Supreme Court that these laws
are contrary to American values,”
said Ruth Harlow, the lead attor
ney on the case and legal director
at Lambda Legal.
Sodomy is defined as abnor
mal sex, and some state laws
include anal and oral sex in that
definition. Nine states ban con
sensual sodomy for everyone:
Alabama, Florida, Idaho,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Utah
and Virginia. Texas, Kansas,
Missouri and Oklahoma punish
only homosexual sodomy.
In December, the Supreme
Court said it would review the
prosecution of the two Houston
men under a 28-year-old Texas
anti-sodomy law.
The case began when sheriff’s
deputies, responding to a false
report of an armed intruder, went
into John Lawrence’s apartment
and discovered him having sex
with Tyron Gamer. Both men
spent the night in the Harris
County Jail and were released the
next day.
Lawrence and Garner plead
ed no contest and were fined
$200 each. The sodomy law
was a felony until 1974, when it
was reduced to a misdemeanor
that today carries a maximum
$500 fine.
They won a brief victory
when a state appeals court panel
overturned the convictions and
ruled the law unconstitutional.
However, the full court reversed
the ruling and affirmed the con
victions and the law.
The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals, the state’s highest crim
inal court, refused to hear the
case, making the Supreme Court
the next and final possible step.
The U.S. Supreme Court
ruled 5-4 in 1986 that consenting
adults have no constitutional
right to private homosexual sex,
upholding laws that ban sodomy.
Keep on rolling
\LISSA HOI.LIMON
THE BATTALION
Keith Head, a freshman biology major, takes
advantage of the pleasant weather by prac
ticing his putting at the Texas A&m golf
course.
Blood centers keep scrambling
m
By Juan A. Lozano
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON (AP) — James Wells is such a ded
icated blood donor that he once had his appoint
ments to give blood scheduled a year in advance.
“Some people are good at sports, some people
are rich. I guess I donate blood,” Wells, 59, said this
week as he sat in a northwest Houston blood center.
Officials with the Gulf Coast Regional Blood
Center in Houston wish they had more donors like
Wells because they’re facing one of the worst short
ages in the center’s nearly 30-year history. However,
they are not alone as other Texas cities face similar
problems.
Earlier this week, the blood center had no sup
plies on its shelves as what little was being donated
was immediately being sent to the more than 200
hospitals in the region it serves, said Robin
Davidson, the center’s public relations manager.
“We don’t have any units of any blood type
available at all. At minimum we should haveathree
day supply. We don't even have a one-day supply,
she said.
At least six Houston area hospitals canceled 1?
geries in the last week because of the blood shfc
age. Officials anticipate shortages every Jantian
because it’s just after the holidays and it’s the n#
die of the cold and Hu season, said Brooke Thalet,
spokeswoman for America's Blood Centers, tk
parent organization of the Houston center and onf
of the nation’s top blood suppliers.
“This January seems to be off to a worse staf
than usual. It’s hard to tell why,” she said. “There
were some donor restrictions put into place ti
summer and fall and we’re still feeling the effect
of that.”
Student lea
ing a dialogi
ounding an o
at least one st
after it made r
Texas A&
oventry pare
Luther King .
ogether and s
Memorial
Resident Bar
( offensive to hi
The problem is nationwide. On Tuesday, tk iff for student
nation’s top two blood suppliers — America
Blood Centers and the American Red Cross-
issued an urgent appeal for donations, sayini
much of the country has less than a two-day sup larticipating i
ply on hand.
iE BEVERAGE OAS
WELCOMES BACK THE AGGIES
Professor charged in
missing vials scare
It is obvi
ffrican-Amer
he whole cult
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at
WITH CRAZY PRICES
ON ALL THEIR FAVORITE BEERS!
By Betsey Blaney
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
30-pack
12-oz Cans
$9.99
24-pack
12-oz Cans
$9.50
18-pack
12-oz Cans
$11.99
24-pack
12-oz Cans
20-pack
12-oz Cans
$15.99 $12.99
*** Prices Good Throash January 25,2003 ***
700 University Dr. E. Ste 202B
Next to Wing Stop in the Blockbuster Shopping Center
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — A
Texas Tech professor whose
report that 30 vials of plague
were missing from Texas Tech
University Health Science Center
triggered a terrorist alert was held
Thursday on a complaint that he
gave false information to the FBI.
Dr. Thomas C. Butler report
ed on Tuesday that vials contain
ing bacteria obtained from tissue
samples from East Africa were
missing when “truth in fact, as
he well knew, he had destroyed
them prior to that,” U.S.
Attorney Dick Baker said
Wednesday night.
Butler was booked into the
Lubbock County Jail about 8
p.m. Wednesday. He was sched
uled to make his initial appear
ance Thursday before federal
Magistrate Nancy M. Koenig.
University spokeswoman
Cindy Rugeley said Butler, the
project’s principal investigator,
reported the vials as missing.
Butler is chief of the infec
tious diseases division of the
department of internal medicine
at TTUHSC. The university said
he has been involved in plague
research for more than 25 years
and is internationally recognized
in the field. He has been at Texas
Tech since 1987.
The samples, among the 180
the school was using for research
on the treatment of plague, were
reported missing to campuj
police Tuesday night. Butlerv®!
the only person with authorize^
access to the bacteria, which
classified as a select agent tw
has to be registered with
International Biohazarij
Committee and with the federi:
ea
By Brc
THE B
Texas A&l
lents now ha
o Texas A<£
government.
“We have accounted for
those missing vials and we h
determined that there is no d
ger to public safety whatsoever,^” w'tXf rZ
Lubbock FBI Lupe Gonzaltf
said earlier Wednesday.
Dr. Richard Homan, Texai
Tech School of Medicine deal
said the bacteria form of plagk
being used for research a 1
TTUHSC “was not weaponiz^
in any way.”
Authorities declined
elaborate on what happened
the missing vials. Whf f
pressed about what happened;
tew decision
vhich took ef
To factor i
lents’ voices,
:d the Ac
ouncil (AP<
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officials repeatedly respondfl Government,
that the samples “have I
accounted for.” HDistinguishec
Baker said FBI agents inter “This (the
viewed Butler on Tuesday. Hf broadly repr
said the complaint pointed dj entire (A&M
r
that the false statement result where the
in a huge investigation invol'; decisions wil
ing about 60 state, local $ Dr. David Pr
federal agents.
Samples were kept in a lockf 1
area of Butler’s lab
TTUHSC’s fourth floor, whichr
not a high-traffic area. But ler kef;
logs on batches of samples, #
one batch was reported missis making procc
according to the
Avalanche-Journal.
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