The Oldest Mexican Cafe in Downtown Bryan Known for The Biggest Breakfast Tacos in the Brazos Valley Featured in the October 2002 edition of Texas Monthly as the best tacos in the Brazos Valley. 5 Daily Lunch Specials 7 am - 5 pm The place that sells the BEST Menudo, Barbacoa, Caldo, Enchiladas, MigasTacos/Plate (ask any of our hispanic friends) B.Y.O.B. 205 S. Main St. (Downtown) Bryan "The Place that keeps Downtown Bryan alive with the Best Mexican Food" Serving Bryan-College Station for 19 Years 779-7337 Open 7 days a week: Mon-Thurs: 7am-8pm Fri-Sat: 7am-9pm Sun: 7am-2pm 10 Sp< Friday, March 21, 2003 THE BATTALi Texas executes 300th prisonei By Michael Graczyk THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas A&M Veteran's Association SERVICE FLAGS DEDICATION m Monday, March 24, 2003 Ceremony begins at 11:00 am in the MSC Flag Room The 5 Armed Service Flags will be dedicated in the MSC Flag Room honoring all service members coming from and to Texas A&M University Speakers include Lt. Gen. John Van Alstyne, Veteran Association President Noel Bowman and a keynote address by Col. Craig Carter For more information about the dedication, please refer to our web site at http^/tamuveterans.tamu.edu HUNTSVILLE, Texas — An apologetic Keith Clay was exe cuted Thursday night, becoming the 300th inmate put to death in Texas since the state resumed the death penalty 20 years ago. In a brief statement. Clay asked God to “forgive me of every single soli tary sin I have committed these 35 years I have lived upon this Earth.” Then Clay looked at three members of his victim’s family, who were watch ing through I know you have suffered a great loss and I am truly, truly sorry. There is not a day that I have not prayed for you. His mother, Cynthia Smith, smiled and flashed two thumbs up to him. He began praying softly to himself as the drugs began tak ing effect. He gasped three times. His eyes briefly widened and rolled back before his eyes closed. Eight minutes later at 6:23 p.m., he was pronounced dead. Clay’s execu tion, the 1 Ith this year in the nation’s most active execution state, came a week after anoth er inmate, Delma Banks, avoided lethal injection and the notoriety of No. 300 when he won a last- minute reprieve from the U.S. — Keith Clay executed inmate The University of Arizona GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL 51 years in Mexico 6-week sessions July 7 - August 14 or July 14 - August 21,2003 Intensive Spanisti (1st thru 6th semesterE^rn: 6-8 units of cr 3-week sessions July 7 - July 25, July 14 - August 1, or July 28 - August 15 Intensive Spanish 1st thru 4th semesterfs^rn: 4 units of ere 5-week session July 14 - August 13, 2003 Upper-division Spanish, Literature & ^ as well as Mexico-related coursef| Anthropology, Political Science, Re^jinp™^ Sociology, and Bilingual Education^finfi^ For information or application, contact: Guadalajara Summer School ♦ The University of Arizona P.O. Box 40966 ♦ Tucson, Arizona 85717 ♦ Phone: (520) 621 -5137 E-Mail: gss@u.arizona.edu Home Page: www.coh.arizona.edu/gss nearby window, and asked them for forgiveness. “I know you have suffered a great loss and I am truly, truly sorry. ...There is not a day that I have not prayed for you,” he said. Clay then turned to his moth er, watching through an adjacent window. He told her he loved her and said “The Lord is my shepherd. Let everyone know that I love them. This is not goodbye. I will see you later.” Supreme Court. Clay, 35. was condemned for fatally shooting a convenience store clerk during a 1994 rob bery in Baytown, just east of Houston. The Supreme Court last week refused to review his case and the state parole board refused to consider a clemency petition because it was filed 15 days too late. “Whatever God’s will is for my life I’m going to accept,” Clay said from death row last week. “I refer to my faith. Lord Jesus, he was wrongly convicted for something he didn’t do and paid the price.” Clay’s injection keeps Texas on a pace to surpass the record 40 lethal injections carried out in 2000. Another is scheduled for next week and three more are scheduled for April. Texas accounts for more than one-third of the now 839 execu tions in the United States since 1976 when the death penalty resumed under a Supreme Court ruling. Virginia is second with 87. It took nearly 13 years for Texas to reach 100 executions, four years get to No. 200 and now, as the appeals process has become more streamlined, just over three to reach the 300th. Clay’s case failed to generate the kind of attention paid last week to Banks, who contended he was wrongly convicted of a 1980 slaying near Texarkana. Banks’ appeals were bolstered by the backing of three former federal judges, including former FBI director William Sessions. Clay, an acknowledged for mer drug dealer who authorities said also was involved in a triple slaying in 1993, attracted no similar support. Clay was convicted of killing Killing machine More inmates have been executed in Texas thaninani other state. Thursday. KeithClaj became the state's 300th inmii to die since reinstating thefe penalty in 1982. Volume 109 U.S. executions since 1 With 300 dead, - 36 percent of all U.S. executions take place in Texas. The next closest state is Virginia with 87 executions or 10 percent of the national total. There have been 836 executions since the 1976 Supreme Court ruled to resume capital punishment. SOURCE National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty store clerk Melathethii li Varughese, who came toi United States from Indiaayi earlier, in a $2,000 robber). “I’m not happy to see son one put to death, but I tall the trial was a fair trial, tie i represented by good coue and it was a horrible crim said Marie Munier, the Hut County district attorney prosecuted Clay. “I think it’s justice,” shesi Enders Continued from page 3 doesn’t have anything to do with it,” she said. “It’s the practice and attitude that makes you good, not if you’re a boy or a girl.” Enders said the criticism from competi tors just pushes her harder to beat them. Michael Sambursky, Enders’ boyfriend, said it’s odd having a professional girl friend in a male-dominated sport. “It’s pretty weird,” he said, “but I think it’s good.” Sambursky, a Cypress Springs High School senior, said his girlfriend travels at high speeds, but it doesn’t concern him. “Right now. I’m not worried about Erica,” he said. “But I may get a little more worried when she gets into faster speeds at the Top Fuel level.” Enders said her mom worried at first, but always supported her. "When I first started, my mom could only watch me through her video camera lens,” Enders said. “1 think it may scare her that soon I will be racing at faster speeds.” Top Fuel competitors exceed 330 mph on a quarter-mile drag. Enders said she always feels safe at any speed. Both of Enders’ cars have won awards for being well engineered. She wears a five-layer lire suit, helmet, gloves, arm restraints and special shoes when she races. “We just pray every time we get on the track,” Enders said. Enders said now that she’s in college, balancing her racing career with school, family and friends is harder than before. “1 go to school here during the wed hut I leave on the weekends to race ori my boyfriend,” she said. “It’s a lothardti than I thought it would be, but I’m gettii! the hang of it.” Enders said her father gave her an incentive to make good grades in high school, and that it’s helped to push tel in college. In high school, Enders’father would only let her race if she gotaB.Hei car was parked for six weeks if shegoli C. “It was a lot of pressure, but it was worth it,’’ she said. “My dad’s my hero,: 1 want to be like him.” Enders doesn't want to take time off from college to race. She plans togrado; in 2006 to manage Enders Racing, LLC while being one of the team’s profession drivers. For more information about Enders, visit www.enders.com. Security beefed up at Houston Port, channel SCAT (Small ( Burhman, 19 bulleproof ve: 23, 2003 in tl Uni pun By Rolando THE BATT/S University ol declining any fu ment on the yell ing investigation, the students im they received sa not reporting h; dents they had of. Tim Bailey received a lettei mand from the I of Student I Jonathan Lusk By Pam Easton THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSTON — U.S. Coast Guard boats are patrolling the Houston Ship Channel around the clock, checking for anything and everything which might look out of place. During a Thursday morning patrol, it was John Stinson’s new recreational boat that didn’t fit among the large barges and tugs which travel the channel. More than 6,000 vessels transverse the narrow channel annually. “This is our first trip out,” Stinson told Coast Guardsman Josh Reagan, who pulled the small white boat over by sound ing a siren. “We’re just cruising around.” Reagan quickly told Stinson he was in a secure area and would have to be escorted out. Reagan took Stinson’s license and regis tration and led the white-haired boater out away from the channel, which is lined by petrochemical plants. Once removed from the secure area, Stinson’s documents letter of warning running for re-< their yell leader Den were returned and he fi instructed about the limits if where he could travel. “We had no idea,” said as his license was retuitf and he wa§ sent on his way. “Most of the people wh around here know about the sett rity zones,” Coast Guard Cmdr. Todd Hall said. “Evef now and then you get someo* with a new boat who does« know about them.” Besides the use of boats at helicopters, the Coast Guard d keep an eye on vessels usins series of cameras, which line! 25-mile channel. Hall said about 19 strategic ly placed cameras are towers along the waterway. “We communicate and watch them all the wayu| ship channel,” Hall said of# sels traveling the passage, any given time we know these people are and are doing.” The agency also has patrols during which guards#’ visit sites along the shore ton# sure everything checks out. By S THE At the March state legislators n sions of tuition ( Benefitting: Scotty’s House The Children's Museum CARPOOL Norm jate. MUSICFISTIVAI2003 niCjHtS H stages over S ©bands MARCH 20.21.2 TICKETS ON SALE NOW| W W W . N O W T H C3 A T E M U S I C . C O M * I give a university authority in settir Public unive Texas A&M Uni Howard D. Grav< deregulation and to cover expected Graves and c five public univ including the l University of h Whoopstock wor ters Erica (left) a wrestler outfits S ir , m*693*’2510 j\uz> Joulli FREEBfRDS.’ /SibL | j ii-1 ^ 1 e • ’ III! Hirtkos com v*?/ *****»-*m»M~ phoqhC55ivccountty.com» rfjSi |CK ' KGtfA , Ja3 ' Brought to you in part by Whoopstock Ciui® Com By T No fines will president candid; violating campaig ment from the Texaminer. Brown, a seni