Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 19, 2003)
!"I Wliy bother with parking when you can walk to TAMU? Thursday, June 19, 2003 ^The > Villas of Cherry Hollow «• Luxury Apartment Living mt Sparkling pool with waterfall, BBQ grills and picnic tables •» Large Floorplans «• Ceiling fans and mini blinds «» Laundry Facilities •m Paid water, sewage, garbage Now pre-leasing for Fall Bug off 503 Cherry Street- (979) 846-2173 Apartments have been furnished with kitchen appliances and central heating/air conditioning. Convenient off-street park ing. Large bedrooms, ceiling fans coupled with a courtyard view make a refreshing, economical alternative to campus living. Villas of . Normandy Cherry Hollow rC W Sq o aT Cross St Cherry St n> 2 S' Church Sr CO University Dr Texas A&M 313 S. COLLEGE 846-33431 THURSDAY NIGHT TONIGHT! CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED THE BOY’S FROM OKLAHOMA ARE BACK!!!! WITH SPECIAL GUEST D’JANGO WALKER DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 PM TICKETS AVAILABLE IN ADVANCE AT ALL ROTHER’S LOCATIONS AND CAVENDER’S SHARON AESCHBACH • THE BATTALION CALL 846-3343 OR LOG ON TO BCSCLUBS.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION Two-year-oid Jonathan Garcia from Houston holds a Madagascar Hissing Cockroach brought by the Texas A&M Department of Entomology to the Children's Museum of the Brazos Valley on Wednesday afternoon. The bugs are part of a week-long program "Bugs, Bugs, Bugs," which includes many different activities for kids. Check This OirF.'! * * * * * FREE Application Fee! • "$0’' Deporii * Reduced Rent. 1 THE BATTALIOI World poll criticize America Volume Wc By Audrey Woods THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LONDON — public opinion in 11 nati® finds many see the United State as an arrogant superpower ika poses a greater danger to peace than North Korea. President George W. failed to impress 58 percent';! those questioned by for a British Broadcastitj Corp. broadcast Tuesday nigli They said they had a unfavorable or very ur able view of the Americi president. If the Americts respondents were remove: from the sample, the num rose to 60 percent. The poll questioned 11,( people in May and June in nations: Australia, Bra; Britain, Canada, France, Indonesia, Israel, J Russia, South Korea ar United States. The poll was conducted by pollsters ing ICM in Britain and Reid in the United States.! BBC did not estimate a of error. Even though 67 percentsaii they wouldn’t want their tries to copy U.S. economit policies, 67 percent aspire to U.S. gains in science and technology, and 56 pe to the opportunities advancement available to pie in the United States, percent aspired to U.S. freedoi of expression. The way the United wields its power worried of those questioned for thepto- gram, “What the World of America.” Only 25 percent said U.S. military might was makingtl* world a safer place. Forty-one percent agre with Prime Minister To Blair’s opinion that the Unil States is a force for good in I world, and 55 disagreed. Sixty-five percent over said America is arrogant. For seven percent said America friendly and 33 percent find l United States antagonistic. Fifty-six percent said tin United States was wrong attack Iraq. That num reached 81 percent in Rus and 63 percent in France,! nations that led world oppc tion to the war. Overall, 37pet cent said the war was right 54 percent in Britain, 74 per cent in the United States anal percent in Israel. The al-Qaida terrorist organ! zation was ranked more danger By i —— wwwxa/Yipuflo ous than the United States, the Americans were judged tote a greater threat than Russia- China, Syria and two member of Bush’s Axis of Evil — Iran and North Korea. Even in South Korea, where tensions along the Demilitarized Zone run high, 48 percent t>f respondents judged the United States to be a greater threat to world peace than the communist neighbors to the north. In a studio panel of com mentators, former Britislt Cabinet member Clare Short, who quit her post to protest# invasion of Iraq, said Sept. 11 America was “a wounded giant, full of anger,- that feels it’s got to exercised power all over the world; think that’s becoming a fright ening America.” Fifty percent of the pol respondents said they had a fair ly positive or very positive vie" of the United States, com] with 40 percent who had vorable views. Those fij excluded Americans. Many said their own coun tries were becoming more America — 81 percent Australians agreed with statement, as did 64 percento{ Britons and 63 percent Israelis. The peof vill see a 1 ives end, : vho spoke r st install in Issues Fori ’residential “When tl going to fall to an end,” 1 The foru issues of clo A&M assoc medicine, Ag- inl By R THE Sunny sk n is the oi mer Texas Brounoff th< Brounoff 37-year-old otologist, w Texas Lotte; June 5. “After thi my life has especi; weeks, winn the simple s just what I said. “1 havi 520 game th had won $5C of its instai never won ai The San in had be< Weather Network i February. News 9 f 24-hour ne Brounoff, an Texas where to his 79-ye in Dallas. ' Stefani stay' their house c As Stefai gressed, B moved her tc to be closer Everythii Sch The I Engineering ships of thi Endowed s< freshman ir Anne D mechanical ,000. The ny of Kerle Bonfire Col the collaj Dr. Den head of m err 2003 Tex Sills pas; le 9islativ< into law f^ick Pen ■ 1,320 Signe sc