www.VelvetRibbonBaskets.com If Be nice. Make your Valentine smile on February 14. (and if you're a bit naughty, they might share) ■easy online ordering ♦ hand-delivered locally ■shipped nationally www.veivetribbonbaskets.com ATTENTION LADIES! Be II You Cun Be In 2003! LACIES Join now for . ONLY $1 This week only! LADIES WORKOUT EXPRESS 1722 Rock Prairie Road • (979) 696-6425 College Station.IX 77845 wwwJadiesworkoutexpress.com Ladies Woftotit Express»a stfedgvef Lady Of Are tea, Ite i!M s Larges; Cte of ten 0% Fitness Centers. TliX /STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION -\S AAM UNIVERSITY Election Commission Howdy A g s ! You are invited to make a difference at Texas A&M! Event: File to run for Student Body President, Yell Leader, Student Senate, / 04 - '06 Class Council, or RHA Date: February 10-14 Place: MSC Foyer Time: 10AM - 3PM RSVP: To run for one of these positions, you must first file with the Election Commission. Questions? Call 862-2606. TEXAS MMaHOVERSITY http://3portii.tamu.edu/carerr Spring 2003 Cain Hall Career Fair Wednesday, February 12,2003 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Internships, Full-time, and Summer Positions All Majors Welcome ^^Career Center -—J Texas A&M University ( Amu in ( \riikSir\ki' X45-5I27 211') koi in s nwi rw fray sty rf tftt M? inTT://Si’oniMAMi.i i)i/( vkhu 10 NATION Tuesday, February 11, 2003 THE BATTALION America by the numbers: Homes, jobs, cats, dogs ... By Genaro C. Armas THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — Here’s the truth about cats and dogs: Canines rule in American house holds, though just barely. About 36 percent of homes have dogs, while 32 percent have cats. Feline fanatics can take heart with this statistic: your pet sees the vet less often. Those are just two examples from hundreds of pages of facts and figures about America found in the new Statistical Abstract of the United States, being released Tuesday by the Census Bureau. The nearly 1,000 pages in the 122nd edition are light on words but heavy on numbers detailing life for Americans. “We got all kinds of tidbits in here,†said Glenn King, director of the staff that assem bles the abstract. “It’s America in numbers.†Here are some of them: —The average cell phone call in 2001 lasted just under three minutes, and the average monthly bill ran $47.37. —In 2000, 44 percent of adults did volunteer work, con tributing an average of 15 hours per month. —U.S. residents spent over $38 billion on lottery tickets in 2001, with about $2 of every $5 going toward instant scratch-off games. —Cat owners are slightly more likely to have more than one pet roaming the home. Dogs, meanwhile, are more likely to visit the animal doctor — 85 percent of dog households took the pet to the vet in 2001, compared with 67 percent of cat homes. —Nearly one in 20 pet-own ing homes had a bird, and one in 50 owned a horse. Households that made at least $55,000 a year were more likely to have a dog, cat or horse, while homes that made less than $20,000 were more likely to have a bird. —The larger the family, the more likely it was to own a pet, no matter what the animal. The government puts together the fat fact book each year, com piling statistics collected by the Census Bureau as well as from private sources. For instance, the American Veterinary Medical Association supplied the data on pets. It’s not all fun and games, of course. This year’s compendium includes a summary of recently released data from the 2000 cen sus, covering income, education and poverty. One section covers solely crime and law enforcement sta tistics. Another covers politics and voting data. Page 238 shows that Republican George Bush received about 1,000 more votes for president than Democrat A1 Gore in Florida in the 2000 elec tion, according to statistics rounded off to the nearest thou sand. (The final, certified tally showed Bush won by 537 votes.) New information is added, too, to keep up with America's changing preferences. For instance, statistics on snow boarding were first added two years ago (more than 4.3 million people like to “get air†down the slopes). Tables added this year include one on alternative work schedules — about 29 percent of full-time workers 16 and older who were not self-employed in 2001 said they had flexible work hours; and home schooling —2 percent of kids age 5 to 17 with an educational level equivalent to between kindergarten and 12th grade were taught at home in 1999. Outdated tables are expunged, with this year’s dele tions including “Commercial Buildings-Energy Consumption and Expenditures: 1995†and “Civil Flying-Summary: 1970 to 1997.†The statistical abstract is available from the U.S. Government Printing Office ($51 for a hard-bound version, $41 for paperback) by calling 202-512-1800. It is also available from the National Technical Information Service ($47 for hardcover, $39 for paperback) by calling 800- 553-6847. Census gets down to the details The 122nd annual edition of the Statistical Abstract of the United States, released Tuesday by the Census Bureau contains nearly 1,000 pages of statistics collected by the Census Bureau as well as from private sources. O £* percent of U.S. housholds that owned O O a pet had a dog, compared to 32 percent having cats. 85 percent of dog households brought the pet to the veterinarian in 2001, compared with 67 percent of homes with cats. 1 in 20 pet-owning homes had a bird, and 1 in 50 owned a horse. 0/% percent of residential and O w commercial waste generated in municipal collections was recovered in 2000, compared to 16 percent in 1990. C "7 percent of workers ^ ■age 25 and older used a computer on the job in 2001. Households in the San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, Calif., area spent the most for food ($7,442) and housing ($19,682) among selected metropolitan areas in 1999-2000. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Fla., consumers spent the least on food ($4,589) and Pittsburgh-Beaver Valley, Pa., spent the least on housing ($10,451). /L/l P ercent adults did volunteer HIHp work, contributing an average of 15 hours per month in 2000. The average cell phone call in 2001 lasted 2.74 minutes, and the average monthly bill ran $47.37. SOURCE: U.S. Census Bureau Investigator: Clara Harris ran over husband at least twice By Pam Easton THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSTON (AP) — Clara Harris ran over her cheating husband at least two times, not just once as the defense claims, a Houston police accident investigator testi fied Monday. Officer Rolando Saenz, the prosecution’s first rebuttal witness after Clara Harris’ attorneys rested midday Monday, said earli er testimony by defense collision recon structionist Steve Irwin was flawed. Irwin testified the turning radius of Clara Harris’ Mercedes-Benz would have made it impossible for her to circle back and hit 44- year-old David Harris repeatedly in a subur ban Houston hotel parking lot on July 24. Saenz, who has investigated more than 10,000 collisions over nearly two decades, disagreed. “As you make a left hand turn, some times you will swing out right and it will change the turning radius,†Saenz said, explaining how it would have been possible for the car to hit David Harris repeatedly. Wheels on the left side of a car have a smaller turning radius than the center of the car, which vehicle manufacturers typically use in measurements for data, he said. Separate and distinct blood stains on the underside of the car showed Harris’ ortho dontist husband was run over at least two times and possibly more, Saenz testified. The distinction is important because Clara Harris says her husband’s death was an accident. Prosecutors say Clara Harris intentionally hit her husband, and to prove their case have produced evidence showing he was hit multiple times. Saenz also said evidence shows Clara Harris took a wider arc around David Harris’ lover’s Lincoln Navigator than Irwin surmised, which Saenz said meant she prob ably had a clear look at her husband stand ing near the open driver’s door of his girl friend’s vehicle. During cross-examination, defense attor ney George Parnham said the Houston police officer wasn’t involved in the investi gation last summer, hadn’t interviewed wit nesses on his own and implied his only role was to rebut Irwin’s testimony. “I was called in to assist the (district attorney’s) office,†said Saenz, who later said he only viewed the undercarriage of the Mercedes in photographs. Linda Haley, a fingerprint expert from the Harris County Sheriff’s Department, tes tified fingerprints found on the hood of the Mercedes belonged to David Harris. Under cross-examination, however, Haley said she could not tell jurors how the prints got there. The defense rested Monday after calling David Hanis’ mother, father and brother, who all said they believe the accused mur derer is a truthful, law-abiding person. “I love her very much,†Mildred Harris said of her daughter-in-law. “She’s really more like a daughter.†Mildred Harris smiled at Clara Harris as she testified, telling jurors the woman her son married a decade earlier on Valentine’s Day grew concerned about him after learn ing he was having an affair. Mildred Harris described her son’s union with Clara Harris as “a marriage made in heaven.†“Sometimes, I thought she loved him too much,†Mildred Harris said. “We were like friends. We could talk to each other because we both loved David.†During cross-examination,, prosecutor Mia Magness implied that once David Harris died, Clara Harris could have kept the couple’s twin boys from their grandparents if not for their support. Mildred Harris quickly took offense at the assertion. “I don’t know what you are trying to get me to say, but there is no problem with me getting to see those children,†she shot back at the prosecutor. Meanwhile, David Harris’ father, Gerald Harris, testified Clara Harris and his grand daughter Lindsey Harris, who was in the Mercedes when her father was struck and killed, had a very close relationship. He also said the family did not approve of David Harris’ affair with Gail Bridges, his former receptionist. “We did not think it was proper,†Gerald Harris told jurors. He went on to describe his daughter-in-law as a loving wife and good mother who was hardworking. Facial Acne? If you have mild to moderate facial acne, you may qualify for a medical research study of an investigational topical medication. • Male and Female 12 years of age and older; • Reimbursement for time and travel. 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