T' Finals!!! Finals!!! Finals!!! Finals!!! Acct 209 Acct 209 Acct 210 Acct 229 Acct 230 Biol U3 Johnson/ Rizzo Biol 113 Johnson/ Rizzo Biol 114 Craven/ Schroeter Biol 114 Craven/ Schroeter Part 1 of 4 Mon Apr 28 7pm-10pm Part 1 of 4 Fri May 2 9pm-12am Test Review Sun May 4 lOpm-lam Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 7pm-I0pm Part 2 of 4 Sat May 3 7pm-10pm Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 4pm-7pm Part 3 of 4 Sun May 4 7pm-J0pm Part 4 of 4 Thu May 1 4pm-7pm Part 4 of 4 Tue May 6 9pni-12am — Part 1 of 4 Mon Apr 28 4pm-7pm Part 1 of 4 Wed Apr 30 7pm-10pm Ch. Review Wed Apr 30 8pm-10pm Final Review Sun May 4 4pm-7pm Econ 202 House Econ 203 Edwardson Econ 203 Nelson Econ 203 Westerlield Econ 322 Engr212 Fine 201 Hood Ch. Review Wed Apr 30 5pm-7pm Final Review Thu May 1 4pm-7pm Test Review Thu May 1 lpm-4pm Part 1 of 2 Mon Apr 28 lOpm-lam Only! Fri May 2 6pm-9pm Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 4pm-7pni Part 2 of 4 Thu May I 7pm-10pm Final Review Tue May 6 6pm-9pm Final Review Mon May 5 6pm-9pm Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 lOam-lpm Part 3 of 4 Sat May 3 lOam-lpm Part 4 of 4 Thu May I 10am-1 pm Part 4 of 4 Sun May 4 10ani-l pm Part 2 of 2 Tue Apr 29 lOpm-lam You can now buy tickets online at www.4.0andGo.com and avoid standing injj ticket lines ill- You can now buy tickets online at www.4.0andGo.com and avoid standing in[ ticket lines Part 1 of 2 Sat May 3 lpm-4pm Part 1 of 2 Wed Apr 30 10pm-1 am Part 1 of 2 Wed Apr 30 5pm-8pm Fine 309 Joyner Fine 341 Joyner Info 303 Anthony Info 303 Stein Info 305 Buffa Test Review Sun Apr 27 9pm-12am Part 2 of 2 Tuc Apr 29 6pm-9pm Partlof3 Wed Apr 30 7pm-10pm Part 1 of 4 Wed Apr 30 7pm-10pm Part 1 of 2 Mon May 5 9pm-12am Part t of3 Fri May 2 9pm-l!pm Part 2 of 2 Sun May 4 1pm-4 pm Part 2 of 2 Thu May 1 lOpm-lam You can now buy tickets online at www.4.0andGo.com and avoid standing in ticket lines ■ Part 2 of 3 Thu May 1 7pm-9pm Part 2 of 4 Thu May 1 7pnt-9pm Part 2 of 2 Tue May 6 6pm-9pm Info 364 Anthony Info 364 Stein Math 141/166 Math 142 Math 151 Math 152 Mgmt 209 Swim Mgmt 211 Swim Mgmt 309/363 Abeison Mktg 309 Pride Mktg 309 Robertson [Mktg 309/321 Conant/ Dewatd Phys 201 Dr. Vitaly Kotcharovski Phys202 Phys 208 Phys 218 Part 1 of 3 Sat May 3 3pm-6pm Part 1 of3 Sat May 3 4pm-7pm Test Review Wed Apr 30 lpm-4pm Part 1 of 4 Mon Apr 28 7pm-10pm Part I of4 Mon Apr 28 10pm-12am Part 1 of 4 Mon Apr 28 5pm-7pm Part 1 of 4 Mon Apr 28 3pm-5pm Part 1 of 3 Sat May 3 12pm-2pm Part 1 of 3 Sun May 4 5pm-7pm Test Review Tue Apr 29 6pm-9pm Test Review Mon May 5 lOpm-lam Part 2 of 3 Sat May 3 I?pm-3pm Part 2 of 3 Sun May 4 3pm-6pm Part 2 of 3 Sun May 4 4pm-7pm Part 3 of 3 Sat May 3 2pm-3pm Part 3 of 4 Sat May 3 3pm-5pm Part 4 of 4 Sun May 4 7pm-10pm Part 3 i Sun May 4 12pm-3pm Part 3 of 3 Mon May 5 6pm-9pm Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 8pm-10pm Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 6pm-8pm Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 10pm-i 2am Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 ]2am-2am Part 2 of 3 Sun May 4 2pm-4pm Part 2 of 3 Mon May 5 9pm-llpm Part 3 of 3 Tue May 6 6pm-9pm Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 4pm-7pm Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 7pm-lGpni Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 lOpm-lam Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 2pm-4pm Part 3 of 3 Mon May 5 6pm-9pm Part 3 of 3 Tue May 6 6pm*9pm Part 4 or 1 Thu May 1 4pn»-7pm Part 4 of 4 Thu May 1 lpm-4pm Part 4 of 4 Thu May 1 7pm-10pm Part 4 of 4 Thu May 1 lOam-lpm Kmew racket Only! Mon Apr 28 4pm-7pm ” Check out our web page at wwwAOandGo.com Test Review Sat May 3 lOpm-lam Part I of2 Sat May 3 9am-12pm Part 1 of 2 Fri May 2 llpm-lam Part 1 of4 Mon Apr 28 12am-2am Parti of3 Fri May 2 6pm-9pm Part 2 of 2 Sun May 4 9am-12pm Part 2 of 2 Sat May 3 9pm-l2am You can now buy tickets online at 1 www.4.0andGo.com ■and avoid standing ini ticket lines Part 2 of 4 Tue Apr 29 4pm-6pm Part 2 of 3 Sat May 3 6pm-9pm Part 3 of 4 Wed Apr 30 12pm-2pm Part 3 of 3 Sun May 4 6pm-9pm Part 4 of 4 Thu May 1 lOpm-lam Tickets go on sale Sunday at 3:00 p.m. 4.0 & Go is located on the corner of SW Pkwy and Tx Ave, behind KFC next to Lack's. iCheck our web page at http://www.4.0andGo.com or call 696-8886(TUTOR)| When you buy tickets at 4.0 and Go, you will receive a 4.0 stamped card for a free Chick-fil-a Chargrill Deluxe Chicken Sandwich at Post Oak Mall. (Chick-fil-a closed on Sunday). AFFORDABLE 1100% Satisfaction Guarantee Call this number for details! ] 739-7601 Monday, April 28, 2003 Fish by R.DeLuna buDE, There's a STRIPPER AT the -\Jgo^T D°o|?! LIEU, I b'WT HIRE HER. DID ?? That Uould Be ate Rit»HT, Like i Trust you Boys To ThRouJ a party. Cube of Xoe By C,J. N2is£ P°llHti2n by J2sh DSrwki WELL WE LOOKED EV6RYWWERE AND we COULDN’T FIND A GIANT INFLATABLE DEVIL TO PUT ON STAGE aT OUR SHOWS LIKE SPINAL TAP ANp AC/DC. / All ul£ COOLD FIND WAS ) A ’’Power rangers” y' Pi n ATA t-H, CLOSE Enough . \ § Jobs Continued from page 1 looking for education majors and only 193 student teachers,” Turner said. “That’s almost a different school for every student.” Jeffrey Scott Jones, an agri cultural economics major grad uating in May, said finding a job was not difficult for him. “I began my search in the fall of last semester,” Jones said. “I haven’t had any problems find ing jobs, but I’ve been really aggressive about it.” Jones has not yet accepted any of the three jobs he has been offered. Becky Carr, assistant dean of the Department of Education, said jobs for new teachers have continued to be readily available. “About 85 percent of our graduates go into the classroom and teach,” Carr said. “Our assumption is that that other 15 percent is not looking for a job either because they get married or go on to graduate school.” Public education could face a $1.4 billion budget cut in the face of a bill passed last week in the Texas House of Representatives. A budget cut could reduce the number of teachers hired in public schools, according to The Daily Texan. Carr said teaching jobs are usually not filled until after graduation. “Generally about 20-30 per cent have a job prior to gradua tion, but most of the jobs are not filled until June,” Carr said. Turner said contacting Aggies Helping Aggies, which has more than 500 alumni, and doing lots of research would aid students in their job search. Turner said using the Career Center’s free services could also help students locate jobs faster. “Students can register now with the Career Center without the usual $35 per semester fee and continue to look for jobs all summer,” she said. “I really encourage students to stay in touch with us.” Jones said being open to dif ferent kinds of jobs is important in the job search process. “The best advice I can give is to not limit yourself to Texas or to particular careers or indus tries,” she said. Arrest Continued from page 1 leading member Mohsen Hakim told AP in Tehran. Bodine told reporters, “I think we are going to see more of an indigenous representation, simply because we’ve had more time to organize.” “There’s going to be a lot of leadership emerg ing,” she said. No obvious presidential choice has appeared thus far, however, and Bodine would not be drawn out on names. “I wouldn’t know today who that’s going to be.” In the Spanish capital, Madrid, a gathering of Iraqi exiles issued a statement calling for Iraq to be governed by a federal system that respects all religions, ethnic groups and women’s rights. Their three-day meeting was sponsored by Spain’s gov ernment, which was a staunch supporter of the U.S.-led attack on Saddam’s regime. The conference in Ur agreed on a set of 13 principles, among them that Iraq must be demo cratic, Saddam’s Baath Party must be dissolved and a future government should be organized as a federal system — the last point an acknowledg ment of the difficulty of centrally governing a land and society divided between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, Kurds and Arabs. The series of conferences is to produce an “interim authority” led by a new president that would pave the way for a constitution and demo cratic elections two years or more in the future. Shiites, a 60 percent majority long suppressed under Saddam’s Sunni-dominated regime, have been enthusiastically exercising newfound free doms, organizing community-level political activ ities, protests against the U.S. occupation and reli gious events. Open elections in Iraq might produce a govern ment dominated by the Shiite clergy, as in neigh boring Iran, some observers believe. But Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld insisted in an Associated Press interview last week, “That isn’t going to happen.” “We cannot have a regime like that in Iran where a few religious men control the situation in Iraq,” Rumsfeld said. “The men and women of Iran want freedom and change. A regime like that of Iran is not compatible with our vision for Iraq.” In other developments Sunday: —Central Command announced that Lt. Gen. Hossan Mohammed Amin, the Saddam govern ment’s chief liaison to U.N. weapons inspectors, was in U.S. custody, latest in a series of ex-offi cials who have surrendered or been captured. NE| THE BATTALlj Corps I Continued from page! Cadets will be closely® itored by members oftheci mandant’s office for signs accelerated weight lossind; live of eating disori Groves said. The weight loss prog® no more conducive to eat disorders than the alhlet program or other enviis merits, said Dr. Mary Govt, psychologist with the Stnie Counseling Center. Thecai in the weight loss program not be monitored by med professionals. Cadet leaders suppon i new weight rules, sayingi Corps’ rigorous exercisep gram requires a certain level fitness. “Aside from perse: appearance it’s a mattei health. It’s an issue of safe said Matt Malone, theP-’e commander. Survey Continued from pagel Sherry Wine, associated:: tor of Special Event Fact said the survey could help: department in making de: sions about alcohol issues. “Special Event Faci constantly wrestles wii issue of serving alcohol alii Arena for concerts, basket: games and other events bea there is an argument thatse ing alcohol would increase! number and types of events! attendance and bring ini revenue,” Wine said. The survey also found 71 percent of students felt tin involvement made an ah* average or very strong tout bution to their overall experience. Kelly Howard, a membe Change, a new student org$ zation that collects f help purchase Aggie said being involved in camp organizations has been ape live experience and givess dents a more diverse group friends from different areas. “Being in Change I shown me how much k§ care for one another,” si Howard, a sophomore aeriti tural development major. This phone survey wased ducted as part of the AggieR ring program, which is if 1 eled after a project Pennsylvania State Universi Roberts said Student Li Studies plans to conduct sh eight surveys on varying topi per academic year. Complete survey resultsd be viewed on the Student L Studies Web http://stls.tamu.edu. Correction In the Page 1, April 25 a titled, "Reagan speechvtf shares experiences," form! presidential speechwrit' Joshua Gildner signed copii of his book at the Barries^ Noble on Texas Avenue. IS Student Counseling Are you a good listener? Do you want to help others? | fyUuHteviA 'Heeded.. .Ail m&fou wdemt\ uuopld MiaWyWMIill London $389 Paris $444 Brussels.. $525 San Jose, C.R $410 Eurail Passes from $249 Budget Hotels from....$18 Fare is round trip College Station. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Brochure & application - Room 104 of Henderson Hall. For more information call Susan Vavra at 845-4470 ext. 133 or visit i www.scs.tamu.edu/emergency/volunteer.asp 721 Texas Ave. S. (979) 696.5077 pick up youn complimentary, premiere issue oP magazine at your local STA Travel branch. www.sdatravel.com on THE PHOOE STA TRAVEL on enmpu/ on THE /TREE! THE BATTALION Brandie LifFick, Editor in Chief The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring se««s ters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam peri# Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send a# changes to The Battalion, Texas A&M University, 1111TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of St# Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed McDonald Building. New# phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: news@thebatt.com; Web site: http://www.thebatt.com Advertising; Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For# pus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2$ Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single c# The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 254. Mail subscriptions are $60 per school year, {SOfortlief: or spring semester, $17.50 for the summer or $10 a month. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover : American Express, call 845-2611.