Fall 'os Staff Application If you can write, edit, design pages, draw, use a camera... Texas A&M's award-winning newspaper is looking for you. • gain valuable experience • earn extra cash • make friends in a professional newsroom environment Name: Phone number: Cellphone or pager: E-mail: Major: Classification: Credit hours you will take in the spring Expected graduation (semester): How many hours per week would you be available for work at The Battalion? ALL APPLICANTS: Please type your responses on a separate piece of paper, and attach a resume and samples of your work (stories you have written for publications or classes, pages you have designed, photos taken, drawings made or other creative samples—just show us what you can do). Section Editor Applicants 1) What are your goals for managing your staff? 2) What do you believe is the role of the section for which you are applying? 3) What changes would you make to improve The Battalion? Pay particular attention to the position for which you’re applying. Staff Applicants 1) 2) 3) V. Why do you want to work at The Battalion, and what do you hope to accomplish? What experience do you have that relates to the position for which you are applying? (include classes, seminars, etc.) What changes do you feel would improve the quality of The Battalion? Give special attention to the section for which you’re applying. OPENINGS INCLUDE: Please check the position(s) for which you are inter ested. If you are interested in more than one position, number them in order of preference with “1" being your top choice. Managing Editor Section Editors News* AggieLife* Opinion Sci |Tech Sports* Design/Copy Chief Graphics Photo Radio Producer Webmaster *assistant editor positions available Staff News Reporter _ Sci (Tech Writer Feature/Entertainment Writer Sports Writer Radio Reporter Opinion Columnist Page Designer Copy Editor Photographer __ Graphic Artist _ Cartoonist DEADLINE: 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 23, for editor positions and Friday, April 25, for staff positions. Turn in applications at 014 (basement) Reed McDonald Bldg. Interviews will begin immediately after application deadline. Extra applications available in the newsroom or online at http://www.thebatt.com 6B Wednesday. April 23, 2003 STATfl | THE BATTALION ‘The Thrill Killer’ set to die By Michael Graczyk THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HUNTSVILLE, Texas '— He became known in Dallas as “The Thrill Killer” for random attacks believed to have left at least a dozen peo ple dead, including five on a single bloody night in the summer of 1995. Many victims over the five-month period were robbed or carjacked. Some were shot with a hand gun, others with a shotgun. Some were mowed down by a stolen car or truck. On Tuesday, five days shy of his 35th birthday, Juan Rodriguez Chavez, labeled an “equal oppor tunity assassin” by authorities, was set to die for one of those slayings — the robbery and fatal shooting of a 39-year-old man gunned down while he was talking on a pay phone in northwest Dallas. “We called him the thrill killer,” said Jason January, one of the Dallas County district attor neys who prosecuted Chavez. “It definitely fit. “He was truly a living breath ing killing machine, and the world’s going to be safer once he’s gone. He was one of the few peo ple I dealt with in 15 years with the DA’s office that clearly demonstrated he enjoyed killing.” Chavez was arrested a month after Jose Morales was shot at a pay phone near Dallas’ Love Field on July 2, 1995. According to a witness, the gunman approached Morales, asked if he was “on the line” and shot the victim in the chest. He grabbed Morales’ wallet and shot him again before fleeing. The wallet contained $2. By the time the sun came up that morning, seven other people had been shot, four fatally, including a female security guard at a construction site. Considered a threat even in custody, he woreto court an electronic stun belt that inadvertenilj activated during the first day of testimony. Joltei by the voltage, he stood up, saying: “It’s shockiif me,” then slumped to the defense table. Hewn uninjured but his attorneys asked for a mistrial, contending his constitutional presumption ol innocence was violated. The request was denied then became an issue in unsuccessful appeals. Chavez dropped out of school in the ninth grade and at age 17 was convicted of murder for killing! neighbor and wounding a man dur ing a burglary. While serving a 15-year prisot term, he racked up more than I disciplinary violations, including punching a corrections officer and attacking another inmate in a recre ation area. But by March 1994, lie had accrued enough “good timel prison to be paroled. He had served less than half of his sentence. “He should have never been lei out of jail,” January said. “He's! poster child for parole reform.” The killing spree began a year later with a fatal shooting during! robbery at a car wash. He was arrested in August 1995 when he reported to tns parole officer. At his trial, he was described as jovial, grinning at spectators, many of them relatives of slaying victims. State District Judge Harold Entzaskedii there was any reason he shouldn’t be sentenced. “I still say I'm not guilty,” he said. Earlier that day, he warned court bailiffs k would antagonize relatives of his victims', manyof them Hispanic, by smirking. “You ever seen a courtroom full of mad Mexicans?” he said. “You oughta see them whet I walk in the courtroom smiling. “Em not going to let them see me sweat.” He should have never been let out of jail. He y s a poster child for parole — Jason January Dallas County district attorney NEWS IN BRIEF Students charged with burning flags HOUSTON (AP) - Victoria McCord was proud to share one of her most prized possessions with the world by displaying it at her Harris County business. The nine-foot flag that draped her Army veteran brother's casket hung vertically outside Lumber Tag Specialties until March 22, when she received a call while attending a birthday party that there had been a fire. When she arrived, the flag was only a char mark on the metal siding. "Had the fire gotten into the rafters under the eaves, it could have caught the insulation on fire," McCord said Monday. I McCord said drivers of three cars passing her business spot ted young men fleeing from the fire. One stopped to help clean up the mess, another called 911 and a third chased the suspect briefly and took down to license plate number. On Saturday, Harris Countyliit investigators arrested Randal Heinrichs, 17, and a juvenilefel low student at Cy-Fair Higl School. Each is charged wil arson and criminal misdiiel both second-degree felonies that carry a prison sentence fff between two and 20yearsan(j a fine up to Si0,000. A TTENTION GRADUA TING SENIORS YOU’VE GOT THE EDUCATION EDGE WITH ZERO DOWN PAYMENT ZERO INTEREST PAYMENTS AND ZERO CAR PAYMENTS TIL 2004. PLUS GET $1500 CASH BACK** •1500 CASH BACK VALID FOR 2003 MITSUBISHI GALANT WITH EDUCATION EDGE. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. 4 MITSUBISHI MIL. MOTORS wake up and drive $ 338* ^0 y. f Eclipse Coupe Outlander $ 340*| *ALL PAYMENTS ARE DEFERRED UNTIL 2004 AT 7.9% WAC EXCEPT OUTLANDER AT 8.9% PAYMENT OF GOVERNMENT FEES AND DOC FEE ARE EXTRA. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. GET MORE THAN YOU BARGAINED FOR. WITHOUT BARGAINING 1309 S. Texas Avenue, on the bend in Bryan (979) 822-5454 www.higginsautogroup.com Volume SB Zac Cov< from rain. Not only Spring Stat Wednesday but Coventr ure of the F that was a c body presidi Looking ments before the Fall Act Trav awa By B< THE ASS' TORONT officials ’ Wednesday t Toronto, wh the SARS vi new location Canadian said they w health advi: their nation’s safe place.” location outs in efforts to < In Beijing said all put close Thursd affecting 1." 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