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Westgate Biologicals DCI Biologicals 700 University Dr. E 4 223 We |, bom Rd Suite 111 College Station Br V an 268-6050 846-8855 Continued from page #29 “Private Wedge: The Bad@$$” Br Lficms YOU DARE SCARE THE ONLY WOMAN IN MY LIFE'? THE WOMAN I INTEND TO MARRY.'? Ar/VAMF.'// I'LL KILL YOU! OCT YOUR HEAD OUT Of me GUTTER ANV UELP US FIGHT THIS STAR THING, Office.” Irvin, of St. Petersburg, Fla., said he would probably arrive in Baltimore on Tuesday and travel to Chestertown to meet with Dotson. Baylor head coach Dave Bliss did not immediately return tele phone calls Monday night. The school’s athletic department did not immediately have comment. Last Thursday, Dotson volun tarily went to the Dorchester County sheriff’s office near Hurlock to make a statement about Dennehy’s disappearance. He was never in custody and was not arrested, leaving the office with his high school basketball coach. Waco police declined to dis cuss what Dotson told authorities last week, saying only that it did not change the course of their investigation. Dennehy’s Chevrolet Tahoe was found June 25 in a parking lot in Virginia Beadi.| Authorities said R were trying to determine i[| 9mm handgun found Thursdai a Waco apartment compl Baylor was related to Dei disappearance. According to an earlierse* warrant affidavit, an ur informant reported to Defer authorities that Dotson cousin he shot Dennehy two argued while shooting I; guns in the Waco area. Some of Dennehy’s say he told them that Dotson were being threaier: and that they obtained gi Dennehy’s family claimedfc. foot-10, 230-pound center coaches he feared for his I Bliss has repeatedly said and his staff were not awaii any threats. Dotson lost his b scholarship this spring not expected to play at Efe next season. Tuition Continued from page 1 Cuts NEWS IN BRIEF Continued from page 1 Gates said training will be provided by Right Management of Houston, a firm that spe cializes in assistance for those in career transi tion. Human Resources will also provide indi vidual job-search assistance and training on how to use the Human Resources Employment Office’s online application system. Overall support and services. Gates said, are accessible to laid-off employees through the Employee Relations Office and the Employee Assistance Program. Gates said he realizes the loss is not limited to those directly affected. “Many of them have families who must also share in these regrettable personal setbacks,” he said. “In a very real sense, we are all dimin ished by any loss to the Aggie family.” Bush requests help with Iraq CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) — President George W. Bush said Monday he is working to persuade more nations to help in Iraq, where Saddam Hussein loyalists are killing coali tion forces in a war that persists alongside rebuild ing efforts. Speaking at his Texas ranch with the leader of one supportive country, Premier Silvio Berlusconi of Italy, Bush said, "The more people involved in Iraq, the better off we will be." At the same time, he accused the governments of Syria and Iran of harbor ing terrorists and said ter rorism was the greatest obstacle to peace in the region. The mention of Syria and Iran by Bush were a way to keep reminding those countries of the need to take strong action against terrorists, Bush spokesman Scott McClellan said on Air Force One during the flight back to Washington. universities in Texas. The University tried to show the value it places in graduate stu dents by increasing the funding to their health care premiums by $3 million. Gates said. Gates said he did not think the education obtained through involvement in campus organiza tions, would be affected by the tuition increase. Mike Friedman, a graduate psychology research assistant, said he came to the presentation because there has been a lot of uncertainty in the graduate stu dent community about tuition and fees. He said there has been a 50 percent increase since he applied to graduate school, in 2001. L Debbie Perkins, motlii Chris Perkins, a sophomore puter engineer major, said came to see how muchthei* will increase. “When it hits the pockeLji ents get concerned,” she said Lova Randrianarivotj, graduate teaching assistaii the math department, came to find out h( more she will have to pay so can calculate what she has for food expenses. “I think the cuts have nolle done fairly,” she said. "Tlierc things that could have heeiui that haven’t been.” She said the money f cooling the buildings on cif. could be cut and the m* spent on the new Webpagei the library could havebeenkj for other purposes. Retention Continued from page 1 U.S. Embassy hit in heavy shelling in Liben “It was a great experience for everyone,” Porchia said. Porchia said everyone in the Department of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships was glad all the work they did paid off. “We have worked very hard on this program and we are glad to see it become suc cessful and recognized,” she said. The award was established in 1989 to reward universities in the United States and Canada that create innovative programs and services to aid the school in student retention and encourage students to be successful on and off campus, according to the Noel-Levitz Web site. Nominees are judged by a panel of higher education administrators and consultants who base their decision on effectiveness, originality, cre ativity, use of resources and adaptability to other institu tions, according to the Web site. A&M was one of nine uni versities honored. By Alexandra Zavis THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ^ Student Counseling luuiidcii £gLHdp£in [Stressed out over grades? Worried about what's going on at home? Has a relationship got you down? Call us...845-2700 >%) Available 4 PM to 8 AM weekdays, 24 hours a day on weekends MONROVIA, Liberia — A thunderous barrage of mortars shook Liberia’s capital Monday, hitting residential neighborhoods along with two U.S. Embassy compounds, and killing more than 90 people as government and rebel forces fought over President Charles Taylor’s last stronghold. Wailing Liberians lined up bloodied, mangled bodies outside the U.S. Embassy, demanding to know why Washington has not sent troops to end more than a decade of strife in the West African nation founded by freed American slaves. With more than 360 people injured — some hauled to the hospital in wheelbarrows, others screaming in pain — Monday appeared to be the bloodiest day of fighting in three rebel attempts to take Monrovia in the past two months. Before the shelling began, American HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters landed in the U.S. Embassy compound in a driving rain, dropping off about half of a 41-member Marine security team. Dressed in green camou flage, body armor and helmets, they jumped out and ran up a hill. About 23 foreign humanitari an workers and journalists clutch ing bags and backpacks ran to the spinning aircraft as Marines and embassy officials shouted: “Go! Go!” Among them were the United Nations’ last seven for eign staffers, who had returned to Monrovia just two weeks earlier during a lull in fighting. The State Department criti cized the rebel group Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy for “reckless and indiscriminate shooting” and appealed to neighboring African countries to guard against weapons going to Liberia. Shifting the target of U.S. rhetoric from Taylor to the rebels, spokesman Philip T. Reeker said, “If we’re to trust them in the future to participate in the demo cratic governance of Liberia, we need to be able to see them keep their commitments now.” U.S. officials also announced that 4,500 more American sailors and Marines have been ordered to position themselves closer to Liberia, if needed for an evacua tion of Americans, peacekeeping or some other mission. “We’re concerned about our people,” President Bush told reporters in Crawford, Texas. He indicated he had not yet decided the size of a U.S. force that might be sent to help a promised West African peacekeeping mission in Liberia. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan once again urged Washington and West African states to commit troops. “I think we can really salvage the situation if troops were to be deployed urgently and promptly,” he said. During 2 1/2 hours of sus tained mortar fire, a shell slammed into a U.S. Embassy Marines ready, U.S. compound hit Athree-ship •• t , amphibious ready afR!CA\ group was deployed N— for evacuation of wJhmmkau j a Americans from ISLiiiULUi / 0 the capital. Monrovia. ^ Heavy fighting continued and a U.S. diplomatic compound was hit by mortars. Un/Jod Nation 5 Y ■ French Embassy ‘C/.S. Embassy 1 British Embassy O 1/4 mi O 1/4 km A thin tic Ocean Monrovia •5. 4 the residential compounds lined them up in front ofi embassy, next to a wallei# zoned with the Americansd “We’re dying here,”screif some in the crowd; | ; w American servicemen in»tt II age watched from beiW letproof glass. One man held up a tiff scrawled sign: “TodayGW 1 kill Liberia people.” Down the hill from ill embassy, a small boy lay fe down in the grass—theviclid a blast just yards away. Leavesd greens he was collecting for lay scattered around his body. Sk) By As the ( to 7,000 fe chute tigh thought, “V to be writin wasn’t part Pilot Mi then procee to create a we, and ou cabin for a This is; told. But th “Every day for jumping Steve D Perkins gav plane door 1 “Hold 0 said as he, F out the door glimpse a p get from jui Dorsey, hang out at on Coulter Messina He “When complaining keeping us f senior inten Perkins 1 Cor Full Write This new tion is worl Morrow fan tracks and 2002 conce provides a Morrow cor SOURCES: United Nations; ESRI; Associated Press residential compound where some 10,000 terrified Liberians had taken refuge, killing 25 peo ple, aid workers said. Many more were wounded, including two Liberian embassy guards. Across the street, in the sprawling embassy complex overlooking the Atlantic, a shell hit the commissary building. There were no reports of injuries. After the blasts, enraged Liberians dragged bodies from In a densely dential neighborhood, house, killing 18 strike, emergency workerssiU the scene. At least 47 Liberians# killed in other strikes Mon officials at John F. Kenn Hospital and aid groups said Bloodied patients sere# with pain lay on mattresses i* the floor. “We really don’t know In* we are going to cope withM uation,” said Mohammed SI the hospital’s medical “All of a sudden we receiving, and receiving, receiving.” More than 200 i at the hospital in police cars and wheelbarrows, About 50 others were trest at a Red Cross trauma cent 112 at clinics set Sans Frontieres, or Without Borders. our ^yai/oriteJ and Order Today! Good News! Tickets to all shows on the 2003-2004 season of MSC OPAS are on sale now! To assure yourself of the very best seats to the very best shows, order your tickets to any of the performances on the Main Stage, Intimate Gatherings and OPAS JR seasons. THREE MO’TENORS | September 20 RIGOLETTO | October 2 THE SOUND OF MUSIC | October 8-9 BOWFIRE | November 14 A TUNA CHRISTMAS | November 19-21 MANCINIATTHE MOVIES | January 21 CATS | January 27-28 CINDERELLA | February 7-8 MSC OPAS n f Three Decades of Performing Arts Lien I entertain inspire MOSCOW STATE RADIO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS | February 25 Broadway Series Sponsored by: CenfrollfexasENJ^. FAME - the musical I March 9-10 buy tickets, be inspired iee Four Broadway Shows for Only $133! ORDERTICKETS NOW at www.MSCOPAS.org or request a free brochure by calling 845-1234 THE BATTALIOf True Brown Editor in Chief The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is, Monday through Friday during the tali a«l ft semesters and Monday through Thuisdayfcfe; summer session (except Univeisity hoW exam periods) at Texas A&M Univeisity. Pf’fe 1 Postage Paid at College Station, IX ?78*1T. : MASTER: Send address changes to He Efe Texas A&M University, 1111TAMU, Colleges 1 # 77843-1111. 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