CQQ Wtfi Student fi: : 1 **19Q y%j%J Advantage i^a^lKga yjljb9 WHhColegeID Round Trip Or Save 15% on yvalnjp fares VWth Student/WrartageCan) Ahvays affordable. Always convenient Always hassfe-free. Visit www.greyhound.com or call 1-800-231-2222 GREYHOUND ‘Throe-day advance purchase required Often valid tor travel 2/17/03 - 4/30/03 Eaater blackout dates apply Not valid In combination with any other discount fare. Some restrictions and limitations may apply. Student Advantage discount subject to change and availability. Prices subject to change without n MARDI GRAS PARTY Crawfish Boil Starts at 5:00 $ 1.50 bar drinks, long necks, domestic pints, frozen drinks ALL NIGHT LONG BEADS TOSSED ALL NIGHT Shot Specials 25% off all menu items Tuesday, March 4th FAT TUESDAY w/The Dave Matthews Cover Band 696-5570 for details Party Safe and Designate a Driver /fyt ou need someone to talk to...Mentors are there to listen. Mentors in the College of Veterinary Medicine Biomedical Sciences Program Mr. Brady Dennis Dr. Lisa Howe Dr. Matthew Miller Dean's Office Ms. Sue Moody Phvsioloev and Pharmacology Dr. Deborah Kochevar Large Animal Medicine Dr. Robert Field Veterinary Anatomy and Public Health Dr. A.B. Childers Ms. Norma Funkhouser Dr. Lynn Ruoff Dr. Jane Welsh Research & Graduate Studies Ms. Danyelle Mack Small Animal Medicine Dr. Theresa Possum Veterinary Pathobioloev Dr. James Den- Ms. Mary Jewell Mentors in the College of Science Dean's Office Dr. Nancy Magnussen Bioloey Dr. Karl Aufderheide Dr. Nina Caris Dr. Vincent Cassone Dr. Rita Moyes Ms. Jennifer Panott Mr. Lawrence Gibbs Chemistry Dr. John Hogg Dr. Wendy Keeney-Kennicutt Ms. Marilyn Wanen Ms. Julie Wilson Physics Dr. William Bassichis Dr. Nelson Duller Mathematics Dr. G. Donald Allen Dr. Arthur Hobbs Statistics Dr. Larry Ringer Dean's Office Dr. Kelly Hester Mentors in the College of Medicine Humanities in Medicine Dr. Mary Elizabeth Herring Human Anatomy and Medical Neurobioloey Dr. Farida Sohrabji Mentors are faculty, staff, and administration dedicated to helping students. Visit our website at http://mentors.tamu.edu for more information on these and other Mentors! tfr -tfr -£r -sir -fr 'Cr 'Cr tIt tIt ~Ct 'ir 'Cr -£r t^r 'Cr ~£r 'Cr 'Cr ~£r rir tCt -tfr 'Ct tV -Cr tCt "ir ’ir "ir 'Cc tir ~Ct t^r ~ir "Cr ~Ct "Ct ’ir *£? "ir tIt i2r ~Cr tir ~ir 'Cr ~Ci h lfy< ou need someone to talk to...Mentors are there to listen. Mentors in the College of Education Dr. Jim Woosley Dean's Office Ms. Debi Buckley Mr. David Byrd Dr. Jane Conoley Ms. Shannon Fite Ms. Amy Klinkovsky Dr. James Kracht Ms. Vida Wilhelm Center of Distance Learning Dr. Ann Gundy Educational Administration Ms. Joyce Nelson Continuing Education & Public Service Dr. Jan Fernandez Dr. Linda Glessner Educational Human Resource Development Dr. Kenneth Paprock Educational Psychology Ms. Angela Albrecht Dr. Linda Parrish Ms. Carol Wagner Health and Kinesiology Dr. Bob Armstrong Dr. Paul Batista Dr. Stephen Crouse Dr. Maurice Dennis Dr. Steve M. Dorman Dr. B. Lee Green Ms. Mary Beth Isenhart Dr. Sandy Kimbrough Dr. P.J. Miller Ms. Rose Schmitz Mr. Frank Thomas Dr. Ping Xiang Teaching. Learning. & Culture Dr. Cindy Boettcher Dr. Lynn Burlbaw Dr. Frank Clark Dr. Gerald Kulm Dr. Vickie Lacy Dr. Charles Lamb Dr. Dawn Parker Dr. Zohreh Eslami-Rasekh Dr. Patrick Slattery Ms. Zee Zemial •it £ ■ft ☆ Mentors in Other Departments Agriculture Program Ms. Edith Chenault 12th Man Foundation Mr. Nick McGuire Texas A &M Foundation Ms. Cathy McWhorter Sterling C. Evans Library Ms. Lori Salter Luza Ms. Eva Maddox Texas A&M University Relations Mr. Gerard Farrell Security and University Police Sgt. H. Allen Baron Lt. Bert Kretzschmar Athletic Department Mr. Mike Caruso Ms. Mona Osborne Texas Agricultural Extension Dr. J. Reynaldo Santos Vice President of Administration Human Resources International Student Programs Ms. Susan Arthen Ms. Jane Thiele Ms. Myra Winters Col. Don Cumbie Sgt. H. Allen Baron Texas Sea Grant Mr. Mark Evans Division of Finance Ms. Kimberly Crawford Ms. Jaclyn Symank Mentors ate faculty, staff, and administration dedicated to helping students. Visit our website at http://mentors.tamu.edu for more information on these and other Mentors! ■jir ■ft ■ft ft -ft •ft ■ft ft ■ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft -ft ft ft ■ft ft ftr ftr ft DINOSAURS! Friday, February 28, 2003 NATION THE BATTALIOS ‘Mister Rogers’ dies of cancer at 74 By Todd Spangler THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PITTSBURGH — A televi sion icon who put on a zip-up cardigan and sneakers each day and gently invited millions of children to be his neighbor, Fred Rogers never wavered in the mission he considered his min istry: to use “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” as a way to per suade young ROGERS ■ft'TftTft'ft''ft--ft'-ft'-ft''ft-'ft'ft'-ft''ft'-ft'-J^-l^-ft'-ft''ft'-ft'ftrft'ft'-ft'ft'-ft'ft'-ft'ft'Tft-ft'-ft'-ft'ft'-ft--ft'-ft''ft'-ft--ft--ft'-ft--ft--ft'ft'ft''ft'-ft'ft''ft'^ -ft ■ft ■ft •ft •ft •ft ■ft •ft •ft •ft •ft ftr ■ft ftr ■ft •ft ■ft ■ft tft ftr ■ft •ft ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr ftr viewers to love them selves and others. Early Thursday, Rogers died following a bout with stomach can cer at his Pittsburgh home, leav ing friends, colleagues and gen erations of people who grew up watching him in mourning. He was 74. For more than three decades, his low-key, low-tech public tel evision show refused to follow its louder, more animated com petition, sticking to the format Rogers developed, presenting him as one adult in an increas ingly busy world who always had time to talk to children about their feelings and listen to them, “What a loss to the world. He talked to kids at the ages of 4 to 6 about feelings. That’s the age when they begin to realize they have an effect on their world,” said Dr. T. Berry Brazelton, an author and child development specialist. An ordained Presbyterian minister, Rogers produced the show at Pittsburgh public televi sion station WQED beginning in 1966, going national two years later. The final episode, which was taped in December 2000, aired in August 2001, though PBS affiliates continued broadcast old episodes. Composing his own so for the show, Rogers ope each episode in a set mads look like a comfortable In room, singing, “It’s a beaut! day in the neighborhood." 0» of his sweaters hangs in Smithsonian Institution. He would talk to vieweisini slow, quiet voice about Ihti feelings and introduce ttiem; other characters and guest including cellist Yo-Yo trumpeter Wynton Marsalis Then, he would take his aiii ence on a magical trolley tii into the Neighborhood of Mali Believe, where puppet create. — including X the Owl, Kit Friday XIII and Daniel Tiger — would interact wit each others and adults. Rogers did much of the pup pet work. On Thursday, staff at Ft Communications Inc., u produced the show, brousk bouquets of flowers left WQED and placed themonili set next to King Friday’s castli “He was not an actor. Peop; would ask us, ’What is 1 Rogers really like?’ The is was. he was the same,” sail family spokesman Dan Newell, who played ft McFeely on the show. The show won four Emm;! plus one for lifetime achieii ment. Rogers received Peabody Award in 1993 andl* Presidential Medal ofFreedot in July 2002. In April 2002, Preside! Bush invited Rogers to launch a reading program.Wlie Rogers entered the rooms introduction, spontaneon applause erupted. Rogers hushed the asking for 10 seconds of siba to “think about anyonewhote loved you and wanted for you.” Tech students to pay $401 extra in tuition per semester By Betsy Blaney THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LUBBOCK, Texas — Texas Tech University students will pay about $400 more in tuition and fees after the university’s Board of Regents approved the increas es Thursday as a way to help deal with the state’s budget shortfall. The 19 percent Overall increase in tuition and fees is to help offset a reduc tion in state funding that stems from the $9.9 billion short fall legislators are dealing with in Austin. Some of the fee increases at the uni versity will go into effect for the would instead go to classnxf and faculty needs and the ne* fees will be set to maintaint!< current level of services, said. “We spent a lot of time on if issue,” Regent Carin “It’s not something thatweffl to do. If we get some helpouH the Legislaiw u Ifs not something that we want to do. If we get some help out of the Legislature, we’re go ing to relook at the ees. — Carin Barth Texas Tech regent we re g relook at ll> fees. It’s something takf lightly.” Revisibi the fee increas depends less-than jected b deficit, re said. Students« not notice a nfi ative cht s e r v ices M i c h a ( summer session with the remain der starting in the fall, Tech spokeswoman Cindy Rugeley said. The increases at the universi ty’s Health Sciences Center will be implemented beginning in the fall, she said. The university has already put in place a flexible hiring freeze, eliminated state-funded travel outside Texas and is taking a close look at energy costs. Tech needs to come up with $14 million in cuts for the current budget year. The regents vote unanimously on the increases. The largest jump will be in fees, which now are subsidized by state funds. Those state dollars Shonrock, vice president for# dent affairs, has said. The largest proposed increZ are in the information ted fee and the library fee. For dents taking 15 hours a semesli' the library fee would inerts from $75 to $225 and the nology fee would increase $150 to $210. Other feesl^ increased slightly include meJ ical services and student reef ation center fees. A new student business sen 1 ' es fee will be $7 an hour. Tuition would increase $44 per hour to $46 per hourf- instate students and from 0- per hour to $313 per hour forou 1 of-state residents. Saturday, March 1 2 PM and 4 PM Rudder Theatre # IN THE AFTERNOON! Radio News from the newsroom of BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY All Tickets Only $7.50 THE BATTALION campus and community news 1:57 p.m. Monday through Friday INVADING THE OPAS JR SEASON Call 845-1234 www.MSCOPAS.org on KAMU-FM 90.9 College Station / Bryan St Sch F reedom of received ar blow Feb. junior at Dearbo School in Michi, asked to either 1< school or changt antiwar T-shirt h The shirt, worn I Bretton Barber, I ture of President W. Bush on it wi Terrorist” unden to go home rathe according to The Although the ing stirs up conti that is not a reasi those views. At a ning to explore t! and preparing to community, disci noting those be students’ opinion treatment, as wel the censored indi ther political acti Barber's opini against the Amer ty, but it should r ignored. A topic that ai controversy and : war demands ana cism to insure th; decision is made, percentage of the that will undoubt the nation’s entra haphazard decisi< made by the Busl is not only benefi question the gove ments it might ha although his opin to share that view School spokes that “emotions w eliminate the pro Although the atm Do Public U i bet you was woi about v; about what we c begins Eve Ensl Monologues,” w at Rudder Audit troversy last yea the first time on this year has pre remains to be a movement coup] the “V-word” in raw display of f< of it. Don't be igne As far as mar na” flagrantly di ordinary person’ with sex, and sir using the word “ Portrayal ol incident wr In response to article: I am upset at th dragging out the party from this p all, the main story Sure there were i but not each an 6,000 were causir As for this being "ghetto party," t between a "gheti described as ghet intention on the | at this school for like they did, but that we are playin People chose tc things that they h media, but until ) Will not know. Ar diversity issue, yc