SPORTS THE BATTALI01 :h one ig ACC lation director Mark Pm ave no comment uni is. voted to expand on )fficials visited M acuse to assess their faci me into the picture ta mipromise suggested ti) T. Casteen HI. e of five Big East footM suit June 6 to try tosto se from leaving the cot Pittsburgh, Rutgers a® rther parties to the suit, ent Philip Austin sail irticipate Wednesday im; :e call among the plain- he lawsuit, but did n iy. Austin would not sat discussed on the call, we get a better sense ate sense, we have™ he said. “My objec e day one has beenn Big East together as w mecticut judge is hear preliminary ursday in the suit, cticut Attorney General Blumenthal said tie pansion plan will not lifferent, our determine hold accountable Miami al said late Tuesday.‘f ur legal claims to prow ' for the harm done. Om e'en.” .ttorney General Charlie as prepared to intervene re suit. Crist said Miami re conference it wants to I dispute amongathletie citiesCrist said, wlo intercede. “Universities / conference that invites compel Miami, oral) itimate overture, as loi! digations are satisfied" o I 1 members, it w® ! J her necessary to hoiit j pionship game, call was the fifth win dents met via phi ible expansion, St a lucrative conferente levision contract, e Big East will havelt ind that amount douhles June 30. g coack here the cupboard is id Anderson, wearinga d-orange OSU ball cap, think the cupboard was ■e. They’ve got soi sition players back, i have to shore up soi ching.” Cowboys finished tli son 34-24 — unacc a school that won conference chan and appeared in Vorld Series from I STATE THE BATTALION Thursday, June 26, 2003 Defense takes stage in windshield death case Why bother with parking when you can walk to TAMU? ■''The s Villas of Cherry Hollow mI liil I son came to a Texas was in a similar posi Longhorns had faltered TAA recruiting viola' n finishing with a losinj 1998. Anderson’s first sea' as rebounded with) ord. By Angela K, Brown THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FORT WORTH, Texas — Defense attorneys started their case Wednesday in the murder trial of a nurse’s aide charged with hitting a homeless man on a highway, driving home and parking in her garage, where the man died still lodged in the car windshield. Before the state rested its case against Chante Mallard after noon Wednesday, the vic- s son told jurors that his father was a self-employed brick layer who took medication for bipolar disorder and mild schiz ophrenia. Brandon Biggs said that after his parents divorced when he was young, he lived with his mother in Albany and saw his father regularly. Gregory Biggs, 37, lost his truck and house after loaning money to a girlfriend nearly two years before his death Oct. 26, . But he got other jobs and in touch with his son, who met him a few times at a down town Fort Worth homeless shelter 1 took him to movies and the 11, Brandon Biggs testified. However, Brandon lost touch :h his father in the summer of )1. “I would say he was very hardworking. He was very friendly, although he didn’t have many friends,” said Brandon Biggs, 20, a church ministries major at Southwestern Assemblies of God University in Waxahachie. “He was very, very loving, I would say.” One juror cried and another dabbed at her eyes as Brandon > spoke. Mallard, 27, also appeared to cry during the testi- my. Mallard, who faces a life sen tence if convicted of murder, pleaded guilty earlier this week to tampering with evidence and faces a sentence of up to 10 years on that charge. Earlier Wednesday, the Tarrant County medical examiner *3 ■b«t ini •* Luxury Apartment Living «• Sparkling pool with waterfall, BBQ grills and picnic tables Large Floorplans «w Ceiling fans and mini blinds Laundry Facilities •» Paid water, sewage, garbage Now pre-leasing for Fall 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 rd'K Sq n o_ £? Cross St Cherry St Dr 2 e. 3 Church St GO University Texas A&M read the fine print. THE CLASSIFIEDS CALL 845-0569 TO PLACE YOUR AD RON T. ENNIS • KRT CAMPUS Chante Jawan Mallard enters the district Court in Fort Worth on Wednesday. Mallard is charged with murder in the death of Gregory Glenn Biggs. testified that Biggs probably died about two hours after he was hit — and that Mallard’s driving home aggravated his injuries. Biggs’ right arm, right thigh bone and right shin bones were broken, Dr. Nizam Peerwani tes tified. The lower part of his left leg was nearly amputated, and he had gouges or cuts in his torso. It’s unclear exactly how Biggs was in the car, Peerwani said, but his head had been thrust down in the passenger seat or floorboard and his torso was up against the dashboard. “He was obviously in severe, excruciating pain,” Peerwani said. Despite that, the medical examiner said, Biggs could have survived if he had received med ical attention. Biggs did not suf fer from any serious medical condition before he was hit, and the crash did not cause injuries to his brain, spine, heart, lungs, liver or kidneys, Peerwani said. Biggs’ injuries would not have prevented him from mov ing his hands and talking, the medical examiner said. Mallard told police that after parking in her garage, she apologized to Biggs, who was moaning. Biggs’ body was found Oct. 27, 2001, in a park. Mallard’s former lover, Clete D. Jackson, and his cousin Herbert Tyrone Cleveland have pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence in con nection with dumping Biggs’ body. Jackson was sentenced to 10 years; Cleveland, nine years. As part of the plea bargain, both agreed to testify at Mallard’s trial, but prosecutors never called Cleveland. Harris County considers entry into rail business HOUSTON (AP) — Harris County should form a commuter rail authority that would service the busy U.S. Highway 290 corridor linking cen tral Houston to northwestern suburbs, a commis sioner said Wednesday. Commissioner Steve Radack, in a luncheon speech to the West Houston Association, pitched the concept of improving a lightly used Union Pacific line to handle passenger traffic. The line, an old Southern Pacific freight route, runs from near Memorial Park along U.S. 290 and eventual ly into neighboring Waller County and on to College Station. “Compared to light rail, this is something that is much cheaper and certainly something that could be done posthaste,” Radack told the Houston Chronicle for Wednesday’s editions. “It’s something that we don’t necessarily need to depend on Metro.” Metro’s long-term transit plan includes 55 miles of light rail and an eight-mile commuter spur headed southwest to Missouri City along another Union Pacific line. Joe Adams, a Union Pacific representative, said the line is tailor-made for expanded use. “There is also vacant land along it where you could put commuter stations and park and ride facilities,” Adams said. “This is the one line that presents the best opportunity for com muter rail.” Subscribe Now at www.MSCOPAS.org! Morales awaiting federal fraud trial *6:00pm (979) 764-11$ IE, OIL, FILTER 95 By Natalie Gott THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AUSTIN — Former Texas Attorney General Dan Morales, who awaits trial on federal fraud charges, was jailed Wednesday after a judge revoked his bond, saying there was inconsistent testimony in the case. Morales, 46, pleaded inno cent in April to charges that he and Marc Murr, a friend and an attorney, tried to obtain hun dreds of millions of dollars in legal fees for Murr resulting from the state’s $17.3 billion settlement with the tobacco industry in 1998. At that court hearing, Morales sought a public defend er to represent him, claiming he didn’t have the $1 million it Would take to hire private lawyers to defend him. A financial statement later with the court showed he almost $1 million in assets and about $925,000 in debts. Prosecutors said Wednesday that while Morales was out on a personal recognizance bond, he filed loan applications to buy two cars, a Lexus and Mercedes. On one application, he wrote that he made $20,000 a month; on the other application, he wrote that he made $20,800 a month, prosecutors said. Prosecutors asked U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks to revoke Morales’ bond since he claimed in court that he had no income, but claimed income on the loan applications. Sparks ordered Morales’ bond revoked and remanded him into custody. A court hear ing was set for 1:30 p.m. Thursday. It did not list his income or other financial information detailing why he would need a public defender, which he was required to submit in a sealed record to the judge in April. Morales faces prison terms of five to 30 years on each count of the 12-count indict ment, if convicted. Prices " ™ 21 till- 2 Bath-$415 L™ 2Bdr 1.5 Bath-.S4IoV 4Bdr 2 Bath-$350 Rates are per person. 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