6B Assesshnertr The Ultimate Enhancement to your Organization Thursday, April 24 6:00-7:30pm, MSC 228 Professionals from the Department of Student Life Studies will provide. resources and strategies for effectively using assessment in your student organization. 'Av SRstfewt activities If you have any questions, please call 458-4371, Risk Management Services, Department of Student Activities 1 LARGE 2 LARGE 1 EX-LARGE 1 LARGE 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-TOPPING & 2 liter drink $q 99 $|2 99 ® pu/delivery $ 8. M $1 1 99 1 1 • pu/delivery pu/only w pu/delivery PICK YOUR SIDE LARGE 2 TOPPING AND I SIDE $|7 78 I # pu/delivery LATE NIGHT LARGE I TOPPING $Z 99 after I Opm LATE NIGHT LARGE I TOPPING 99 0 after I Opm Northgate Post Oak Square Center Rock Prairie 601 University Dr. 100 Harvey Rd., Suite D 1700 Rock Prairie 979-846-3600 979-764-7272 979-680-0508 Z ill UJ K a < o-J Sunday: 11 a.nra. - midnight Monday - Wednesday: 11 a.m. - 1 Thursday: 1 1 a.m. - 2 a.m. Friday & Saturday: 1 1 a.m. - 3 a l- O > V H m m z Aggieland 2004 Now Hiring If you are interested in editing, designing pages, writing stories, or taking pictures for Texas A&M’s yearbook, simply fill out this form and drop it off in 004 Reed McDonald Bldg, (across from Chem. Bldg). • Earn extra cash • Gain publications experience • Enhance your resume Openings Include: Please check the position(s) you are interested in: Section Editors □ Sports □ The Other Education □ Academics □ Corps Life □ Greek Life □ Copy Editor* □ Photo Editor* Staff Positions □ Page Designer □ Writer □ Photographer □ Marketing * Assistant positions also available Applicants: Please type your responses to the following questions on a separate sheet of paper that is to be turned in with this form. Also, attach any samples of work that you have along with a resume. Applicants are encouraged to include any other relevant information. Name: Phone Number: Cell Phone: E-mail: Major: Classification: Expected graduation date Experience on staff Editor Positions: 1) Why do you want an editor position? 2) What changes would you like to see made to the yearbook, especially in the section for which you are applying? 3) What prior experience do you have in publications? Leadership roles? Staff Positions: 1) Why do you want to be on the staff? 2) What prior experience do you have that relates to the position you are applying for? Applications Are Due By 5 p.m. Thursday, April 24 If you have any questions, please call 845-2681 or drop by our office. Thursday, April 24, 2003 NATION THE BATTALIOS Al-Qaida interview questionec in case of 9/11 terror suspect By Larry Margasak THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — A federal judge gave terrorism suspect Zacarias Moussaoui the right to question a senior al-Qaida cap tive in a closed-circuit hookup but the government says the judge cannot legally do so, according to a Justice Department pleading released Wednesday. The order would be a boon to terrorism defendants if allowed to stand and would pennit judges “a breathtaking right” to micro manage the fight against terror ism, the government told the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is based in Richmond, Va. The written brief was filed under seal March 14. Moussaoui, who is representing himself, has acknowledged that he is an al-Qaida loyalist but denies charges that he was a Sept. 11,2001, conspirator. Government sources have identified the captive as Ramzi Binalshibh, a suspected coordi nator of the Sept. 11 attacks. Moussaoui argues that Binalshibh — whose name was removed from the public docu ment — can show that Moussaoui was not part of the plot. U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ruled in late January that Moussaoui could question the witness with a brief time delay, allowing the court to pre vent transmission of questions the court deems impermissible. Moussaoui is in the Alexandria, Va., detention center, near the district court. In addition to that ruling, Brinkema has questioned whether Moussaoui could receive a fair trial in open court because the government has withheld so much information from him. Direct questioning of an enemy combatant in the midst of the terrorism fight is beyond the court’s powers and would inter fere with an intelligence interro- Indeed, it would give terrorist defendants a powerful weapon to frustrate the executive's efforts.. Vf U.S. government gation, the government said. ‘‘Indeed, it would give terror ist defendants a powerful weapon to frustrate the execu tive’s efforts in the struggle with al-Qaida,” the government said, while ensuring the abandonment of prosecutions in the United States. The government contended that Brinkema failed to consider alternatives to providing Moussaoui with direct access to Binalshibh, including a govern ment statement summarizing the captive’s now-classified respons es to interrogators. The appeals court has sched uled closed oral arguments June 3, but signaled that itwi ed a compromise on the acts question. The court Brinkema to invite the govern ment to propose alternate before the hearing, and she b done so. A separate government te opposed a motion by media ref resentatives that the a: court open the hearing at: release some records now i: under secrecy. The right of public acces substantially outweighed by! need to protect classified infu mation, the prosecutors sa;; adding there was no practica way to divide oral argue between classified and unefe tied portions. The government si: Brinkema ruled from the beK on access to the al-QaidacaptM announcing she did not tins “there's any way that thiscn can adequately balance the lea: imate concerns of the defeixk without the video deposition." Later, the government si; Brinkema rejected the possi ity of substitutions by state the government did not p pose any. Moussaoui also seeks it interview Khalid Shai Mohammed, a captive who: the suspected Sept. 11 masie; mind. Only access Binalshibh is believed tot* before the appeals court. If the government believes is necessary to abandon theprei edition, it could send thecaseii Moussaoui — a French cilia — to a military tribunal, wii could operate in greater sectet) NEWS IN BRIEF Drinking, motorcycle crashes lead to large number of deaths WASHINGTON (AP) — Traffic deaths last year were at the highest level since 1990, with more people dying in drunken-driving and motorcycle crashes. In all, 42,850 people died — 1.7 percent more than the year before — the government said Wednesday. Alcohol-related deaths rose 3 percent to 17,970, the third straight increase after a decade of decline. "It is painfully clear that recent public and polit ical complacency is taking its toll on precious lives," said Wendy Hamilton, president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. The group wants states to pass stiffer penalties for repeat offenders and approve primary seatk, laws, which allow police officers to stop a (i because they suspect the driver is not buckledap Less stringent laws allow seat belt charges o(il|i a motorist is pulled over for another infraction. Only 18 states and the District of Columbia!* primary seat belt laws, according to Advocates! Highway and Auto Safety. Fifty-nine percent of those killed last year was not wearing seat belts. "States have to take it on - they hold cards," said Jeffrey Runge, head of the N Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Motorcycle fatalities rose for the fifth conseffl tive year, to 3,276, the most since 1990. That com pares with a low of 2,116 in 1997. 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