t . . ... ..... • JiLi Tents Tables Chairs Dance Floors Grills Frozen Drink Machines & Much More qfSlo jt ww.partytimerentals.com Graduation Party? Call Us Party Time Rentals 1816 Ponderosa, College Station 696-5SS5 » 1710 S. TaxasAvc, Bryan 822-5555 Want More Bang For Your Buck? A - Affordable spacious floorplans G - Great service and maintenance G - Giant closets and pantries I - Includes 2 sparkling pools & fitness center E - Elephant walk gets you to campus S - Sign now for sizzling low prices & save UJilloiuich 502 Southwest Pkwy. apartments 693-1325 ■ ■<>\<'^5esejux*11 in You may qualify for a clinical research study if you have any of the following conditions: NECK OR BAC K PAIN Recent onset of muscle pain in the neck or back with spasm (involuntary contraction) Must be 18 to 75 years of age Up to S200 paid for time and travel. FACIAL ACNE Male and Female 12 years of age and older Have mild to moderate facial acne Reimbursement for time and travel. Ov 'VerySearek O' .o^ Or > ^ i, o (979)776-1417 or (888)438-9586 o Medical assessments, study-related diagnostic tests, and investigational medication are provided to qualified participants at no charge. change your world tdfidbrf. 1 . 5 .:?/. ....7.Z" $389 Paris $444 Brussels $525 San Jose, C.R $410 Eurail Passes from $249 Budget Hotels from....$18 Fare is round trip College Station. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. 721 Texas Ave. S. (979) 696.5077 pick up your complimenCary, premiere issue oP BREAK magazine at your local STA Travel branch. www.sdatravel.com STA TRAVEL onune >> onTnepnone >> onenmpu/ >> onTne/iReeT .SONS Xt^the SIC HAN Based on SUSAN STROMAN’s Direction and Choreography from the 2000 Broadway Production The classic all-American salute to music, romance and fast-talking flim-flam. Tuesday and Wednesday Nights! April 22 and 23 at 7:30 PM Rudder Auditorium TICKETS Call 845-1234. Logon to www.MSCOPAS.org MSC 0PAS Three Decades of Performing Arts m\ Tuesday, April 15, 2003 THE BATTALIi Fish by R.DeLuna NEWS IN BRIEF Mo/m , You Wave To leave. Parent's WEEKE/Vb is OVER ff \r VfflH, loT This ^ iswY a 5mR\? f You'Re AJoi" ! ^aoUEt> To INTERFERE IaJ ‘ aJATURE? if a Uo/J EW jfl (,f)Z£LLE You'« E 5upposeD LET IT HaPPEaJ! So X.F You're SfAViAife, You F1AVE To AfoT (MTERFERE. You HAME To' LET ME LIVE UkE x A;oR/v\ ALL'/j You UOAajT us To Let foo eat 4 Gazelle ? Class of 2003 give: "Maroon Out" stall www.rdeluna.com Cube of Xoe By C.J, IN OTHER NEWS, THfc U.S. SOUPIER WHO RECENTUY HAP HIS NAM^ CHAN08P TO ORTT- MUS PRIME MAY HAVE MET HIS MATCH. RUMORS HAVE SPREAP THAT THE IRAQI FORCES HAVE ENLISTEP A SOI.PIER EY THE NAME Op MEOA- TRON. MANY FAN0OYS ANt? ROBOT SEEKS WIU. INSTANTEY RECOG- NIZE THE NAME AS THAT OF THE ARCHNEMESIS OF OPTIAtUS PRIME FROM THE POPUIAR BOs CARTOON, TRANSFORMERS. $ ADO AM. BURRY, YOUR RUMS @$$ IS BRASS. PONT YOU KNOW THE AUTOBOTS AL WAYS WIN IN THE ENP/ IN RELATEP NEWS, THE U.S. NOW HAS ENLISTEP IN ITS FORCES MASTER SPLINTER, LION-O, ANP SERBEANT 5LAUBHTER. MAN, THIS WAR'S JUST BETTIN' SUPtR REPICULOUS OArnV now. .kA. Hua*r' The Texas A&M Class of Council has announced a cial "Maroon Out" statue as senior class gift. The Maroon Out statue is 1/2-6 feet tall bronze state A&M students sporting th existing Maroon Out shirts standing in the sawed-offpt tion. Beneath the statue sta: a plaque explaining the Maid Out tradition, said Meiea Malazzo, Class of 2003 giftd and a senior psychology map The statue will stand in the cular drive of the new end it edition to Kyle Field, shesaij The statue has not beenb, yet and the cost is unde: mined. Money left over from project will go to the Bor Memorial Endowment, Mai said. The Class of 2004 gift been voted on but not announced, she said. Ter NSiss Ro|l!!ti°n by Jsah Dsrwki A&M football tick IT NEVER FAILS. EAT Tost ONE PicklEO o&iort Aup umburoer SanPvhcR AND EVERYONE LEAVES TOR THE VM. increase in price; $55 raise for studeo Men, cham By J THE It has be year for the men’s tenm back to Jan u match portic began, the t< ed with qui about whe enough expc in the compt The Aggie entered the : roster that h All-Americai Gaines Continued from page 1 who say the project is more about race than history. “(Memorial supporters) are trying so hard to find some body other than a white male, and that’s a noble effort, but I don’t want to see history rewritten,” said Student Senator John Matthews. Honoring Gaines with a stat ue seems out of proportion to his actual contribution to A&M, which was no greater than that of other legislators who voted for the bill, Matthews said. He also criticized the hurried pace of the project, and said the memorial council should meet more than once before present ing its recommendation to the Student Senate on Wednesday. The A&M chapter of College Republicans, which had been the driving force behind the memori al in its early years, now opposes the project. Jeff Graham, chair of College Republicans and a mem ber of the memorial committee, said Gaines’ contribution to A&M does not rival those of Lawrence Sullivan Ross and Earl Rudder, the two men honored with statues on campus. “(Rudder’s and Ross’s) accomplishments are tangible and well-documented. Gaines’ accomplishment consists of vot ing for a bill,” Graham said. Landgraf said Gaines’ race has nothing to do with the memorial project. “We should recognize the contributions of the 12th legis lature, and Gaines personifies that era of Texas history,” Landgraf said. He added that Gaines, who was from nearby Washington County, has local relevance. More than 40 student organi zations have endorsed the memorial, Landgraf said. A memorial to a black Republican would help balance the recognition given to white Democrats of the Reconstruction era such as James Throckmorton and Richard Coke, who endorsed the lynching of blacks. Many white Democrats opposed the creation of A&M because feder al law would also require them to create a school for blacks, which the legislature accomplished in creating Prairie View A&M, Baum said. “Gaines was the natural leader of the black Republicans,” Baum said. Erecting a statue to Gaines would allow the University to recognize the key role blacks played in the diverse political coalition that during Reconstruction established the foundation for public education in Texas, Baum said. Unlike the University of Texas, which recently placed a statue of Martin Luther King Jr. on its campus, A&M does not have to grasp for outsiders to honor blacks, Baum said. Landgraf said the memorial council would suggest to the Student Senate what form the memorial to Gaines should take and how the funds could be raised. During the height of the Gaines memorial advocacy in the mid-1990s, College Republicans estimated a statue would cost more than $200,000. Season football tickets »| cost Texas A&M students if more this year, KBTX Charnitj News reported Monday. Tickets to the seven horl games this fall are now 5!T for non-students, an incre of nearly $100. Students iv be paying $187. KBTX report: that the new ticket chaif: gives A&M's football teamt: highest-priced tickets in it Big 12. The athletic departmen: budget depends on ticket saw because college sports ist state funded, A&M officialsto: KBTX. Council Continued from pagel was surroum included thre sophomores. Once agai put to the test they travel to leading and Texas A&M Hr catcher Kevin prominent percentage of Cole Station’s population, very feu: them vote. Halter said. “Students seem to be m interested in who gets elet to really important posts, I Yell Leader, and not to un portant offices that affect cost of rent, utilities, eli Halter said. Bonfire Continued from page 1 Media Continued from page 1 Student Body President Zac Coventry also declined to comment. Student leaders who have a vested interest in how The Battalion covers their groups may try to exert influence on editors, Creel said. Even if the student leaders can set aside their organizational interests, Creel added, their presence on the Board creates a chilling effect on editors who must worry that a critical or controversial article may upset the student members of the Board. The student newspaper must be independent and free from the political machinations of student government, Creel said. “Perception is reality, and if the Board is unwilling to acknowledge that improprieties do in fact exist, then The Battalion should altogether discard its facade of independence,” Creel said. “Editors do not need to be filtered by student lead ers, especially a specific faction of campus like the SGA, MSC or Corps, who they have written about in the past.” The Board will meet at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in Room 221 in the Reed McDonald building. Also on the agenda is the selection of The Battalion edi tor in chief for next fall, which the Board will dis cuss in closed session. Creel’s proposal will be considered in open session. it expect the return of Bonfire merchandise at tl Christmas Boutique, includii miniature “cinnamon sit bonfires.” Kirkpatrick said he obsertt positive reactions to Gale announcement. “The reaction to (announcement) was ot whelming,” Kirkpatrick sail “Every Aggie Mom I tall was just ecstatic about it.” Kirkpatrick said the Coal® whose main goal is to rel Bonfire to campus was “vfl happy” about Gates’ decision. “Lifting the moratorium Bonfire-related materials isnl her two on our agenda and at we are halfway there,” he saii TO Zef ug -puf f]ie fun m ij<9uV nexf Junction * We have SPECIAL OFFERS for Sororities Fraternities and all University Clubs • GIFT ITEMS • GRADUATION Graduate with a bang! 1003 2003 CARD & PlRTY FACTORY YOUR COMPLETE PARTY SUPPLY STORE FOR ALL AGES & OCCASIONS! 717 Texas Avenue South, Suite A College Station • (979) 696-3842 Brandie Liffick, Sommer Bunce, Managing Editor Elizabeth Webb, Copy/Design Director Rolando Garcia, News Editor Rob Phillips, Asst. News Editor Melissa Sullivan, Asst. News Editor Kendra Kingsley, Aggielife Editor Sarah Darr, Asst. Aggielife Editor Marianne Hudson, Asst. Aggielife Editor Chris Jackson, Sci/Tech Editor Editor in Chief Brieanne Porter, Opinion Editor Jenelle Wilson, Asst. Opinion Editor Michael Crow, Sports Editor Kevin Espenlaub, Asst. Sports Editor John Livas, Photo Editor Alissa Hollimon, Asst. Photo Editor Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Editor True Brown, Radio Producer Jason Ritterbusch, Webmaster THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday dur ing the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University, Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, Texas A&M University, 1111 TAMU, College Station, tt 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax 845-2647; E-mail: news@thebatt.com; Web site: http://www.thebatt.com Advertising; Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement ty The Battalion. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 25it. Mail sub scriptions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester, $17.50 for the summer or $10 a month. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express, call 845-2611. m A “And Ht