NATION 5 THE BATTALION Thursday, August 7, 2003 FBI catalogs possible concealed weapons iday, August 7,2003 or less (price must 'ring personal possessions %e. If item doesn’t sell, id to qualify for the 5 s cancelled early. FOR SALE d Rockhopper, 2 years ok Judy fork, SPD pedals, SM nm Millennium model 111SSNS 3+1 round, stainless steel finist concealment $300 o.b.o, ca 979-820-3004. nd Dryer Set $250. Refrigr, g at $80. 220-3665. fELP WANTED rs, Dancers, DancersSSS ours. Silk Stocking, 690-lffi y potential/ bartending. Tram!’ -800-293-3985 ext.625. prestigious teaching posifr nings &Saturdays. Muslta* s license 4+years. No crirm e train. $7/hr. 693-3992. hips available for response aduate students to leach k ecialty in new high-tech stated liege prep school for mite ool students. Must have eitf uter skills Spatience with tee- -mail ros505@aol.com a tal Positions available in Augua or two in Woodcreek Sub. 2- 6:30pm-7:15am. 693-5083. ommercial buildings at night, 323-5031 for appt. nted to run Bed SBreakfasL’ pets or children. 492-6571. Kinesiology Major. Child ca'i it opportunity. Must be enfc- xendable w/good transportafa required. 3:30pm- 6:00|)« k, plus 1-evening Soccasima 680-1107. at Sales Management Trainee Rent-A-Car, one ol America 1 ! wing and largest privately hek is currently expanding. Tt* idates are bright, aggressive make-it-happen women a« the ability to follow our las! nagement Training program egree strongly preferred 'M to management 100% torn tail/ Sales/ Restaurant Expen lus ‘Management incomes 0,000 yearly ’Full benefits sluding profit sharing, 401K, Be l/dental. EOE. Apply online a om or contact Recruiting a 97. ound now accepting appla positions. Apply in personte- .-4p.m. 505 University. ondos office assistant ASAP. Tues, Thurs, Friday afternoons kends. 693-2999. search technician is neededto ant molecular genetics laboia- cants contact Dr. John Yu al email zyu@qutun.tamu.etlu. ge Bar &Grill. Part-time cook 6-2833. ng with kids? Now hirins ions, Monday- Friday. ASH day School, 846-1762. ocks is now accepting apple positions including manage- en-staff, wait-staff, host, bus, ease apply at the Cafe Eccell ice at 104-B Church Ave. or 8 for details. chnician: Perfect for August Medical office now hiring, ence for student applying lor ool. Degree required. Posi- a one year commitment. Sal- surate with experience. 979- fax resume 979-776-4260. tore is now hiring for Fall ible hours and discount on Application in store. all positions ©Aloha BBQ in ing Center, Tx &SWPkwy. 1 Liquidation yan, Tx 10:00 AM. Sc Access.-Shop Tools & rnituie & Equip -10% BP ICE eer 10197 o nnation 4S8S Y reek long study with an lent of genital warts, E’S FOOT STUDY 17 and older, with athlete's a participate In a research investigational topical med- related office visits, testing lication are provided at no jle volunteers will receive nsation for participation. ■ more information. HELP WANTED ROOMMATES Part-time positions available. Work after- 2-M/F. New 3bdrm/2ba/2gar house. 4- noons with elementary age kids. Apply at miles from TAMU. W/D. $385/mo. Call Camelot Learning Center, 4232 Boone- 281-682-4227; 281-388-0519. Waitresses needed. No experience nec essary. Great money, flexible hours. All shifts available at all locations. North- Beltway 8 at Imperial Valley, Galleria- fehmond at Briing Drive, South- I45 at Dixie Farm Road. Apply in person, Rick’s Cabaret. Warehouse help needed. Full & part- lime hours. Will attempt to work around class time. Pre-employment drug screen required. Serious inquiries only. Apply in person, 1800 North Texas Ave., Bill Crutchfield, 778-6000, ext. 151. LOST & FOUND Camera found 7/21 near New Main STexas intersection. Contact Jay 862-8127. Accurate description required. PETS Adopt Pets: Dogs, Cats, Puppies, Kit- lens, Many purebreds. Brazos Animal Shelter, 775-5755, www.shelterpets.org REAL ESTATE 2002 16x80 3/2, huge deck, $32,000. 132-Oak Crest in Oak Creek. 696-7596. ROOMMATES 11-F roommate! for GREAT 3/2 house. $350/mo +1/3bills. CONVENIENT loca tion on BEAUTIFUL park. Jenny, 512- 335-8481. $100.00 off first month’s rent! Brand new3bd/3ba townhouse. Canyon Creek. Friendly roommates, on shuttle, $450/mo., Tiffany 254-702-0495. I room in 2bdrm apartment. $247/mo.+ utilities. 691-6293. 1-2 M/F $420/mo. +electricity, 3bd/3ba at Exchange Apartments, great living! 979- 696-4935. IF 2/1 duplex available August 10th. $280/mo +1/2bills. Fenced yard, big clos- els, vaulted ceiling. 979-240-3034, Kris ten. I-F 3/3 duplex, non-smoking, clean. Available August 6th, $317/mo +1/3bills. Sleph, 254-718-8715. I F needed for 3/2 townhouse, on bus route. $350/mo, 817-517-4023. 1-F roommate wanted, Harvey town- house, 2/1.5 $350/mo +1/2 utilities. 693- 2-Male roommates needed. 3/2 duplex, on bus-route, close to campus, $275/mo. +1/3bills. Call John 979-220-5289. 2-Roommates for 4bdrm/2bth house in CS. Large yard. Call 218-5734. 3/2.5 house, two-story, swimming pool, gated community. $450/mo +1/3bills, 696-4413. Available 8/1 or earlier, non-smoking roommates for 4/3 new home, 904 Bou gainvillea, w/d, $400/mo. +1/4utilities. Call Ross at 512-396-0766. F-Roommate needed, 3bdrm/2bth new condo, begins 8/15/03, $400/mo., oft Well born, on shuttle. Call Nikki at 281-543- 3910. Female roommate needed ASAP. 3/2 du plex, fall and spring, pets o.k., stables for horses. 283/mo, 778-5713. Female roommate needed. For August. 3bdrm/2ba mobile home. $275/mo. +1/3- util. Megan 696-2119. Female roommate wanted. 333/mo, 3/2.5 townhouse, pets allowed, on bus route. 979-739-8381. Female wanted for 3/3 townhouse with covered parking, blocks from TAMU, $375/mo. +1/3util. 979-694-0952, 512- 627-9924. M-Nonsmoking roommate needed for 3/3 new townhome, furnished, w/d, parking, $400/mo. +1/3util. (979)764-9032 or (903)918-8550. M/F roommate, non-smoker. 2/1.5 $265 +1/2-utilities. Available 9/1/03, call 691- 6272. Male roommate needed ASAP. 1 block from campus. 224-1071 Room for rent. 1-F, 3bdrm/2ba. $375/mo. negotiable. New house. Call Lauren 680- 9977. Roommate needed to take over 2/2 du plex lease. W/D conn., yard, bus-route, $340/mo. (979)220-3487. Roommate Needed! M/F-preferred. Bills paid, $350/mo. 3/2/2 W/D, yard, broad band, large living areas, on bus route. Pets ok. Rachel 822-3908. Roommates needed for a new 3bd/2ba house behind Aerofit. nice landscape sprinkler system, W/D, microwave, etc. 979-694-1595. 1-F roommate wanted. 2/1 duplex, $262/mo. +1/2bills. Water paid, pets okay. 693-8025. 1-Female needed, $350/mo. +1/3-elec., cable Sphone (everything else paid). Call Jennifer at 903-780-8319. Roommates needed for nice 3bdrm/2ba townhouse close to campus, W/D, microwave, furnished or unfurnished. 694-1595. Seeking 2-F Christian Roommates $400/mo +1/4utilities. New 4bd/3ba house 690-9915. 1-Female roommate needed for 3/2 house otro\/ir'tro on bus route. Call Julie 764-4333. SERVICES 1-M Roommate wanted, University Com mons, $390/mo. Available August 1, year lease, 281-438-3446. 1-M/F roommate needed. 3/2 house on bus route. No pets. $320/mo. +1/3utilit- ies. 676-0810. 1- M/F, non-smoking $250/mo +1/3bills 4bdrm/2ba house, fenced yard, pets o.k. Horse boarding nearby. 25-minutes north ol campus, 979-589-2466. 2 roommates needed, brand new 3/3 du plex, Fenced yard, security system. Call Amy 229-3469. 2- Female roommates needed, 3bd/2ba house. Furnished on bus-route, no pets, $300/mo, +deposit, +1/3utilities. 680- 9783. 2-M/F needed for 3bdrm/2ba in new Bryan housing division close to Blinn. $375/mo. Ask for Camille 979-777-2297. AAA Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of- fun, Laugh-a-lotl! Ticket dismissal/insur ance discount. M-T(6pm-9pm), W- Th(6pm-9pm), Fri.&Sat- Fri(6pm-8pm) &Sat( 10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). Inside BankofAmerica. Walk-ins wel come. $25/cash. Lowest price allowed by law. 111-Univ. Dr., Ste.217. 846 : 6117. Show-up 30/min. early. ADVANCED CLEANING. Housekeeping services, 979-775-3355. Move in/out, bi weekly, monthly. Affordable rates, $62 most houses. HousekeepingBCS@CS.com If You Have Something To Sell, Remember: Classifieds Can Do It Call 845-0569 The Battalion By Curt Anderson THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — The FBI is warning security personnel about dozens of everyday items — from belt buckles to keys to a dead ly deck of cards — that can conceal knives or other weapons terrorists could use to hijack an airliner. Many items cost less than $20 and can be difficult to detect using airport screening devices, according to an FBI statement accompanying the 89-page catalog obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press. The catalog has been converted into a CD and circulated to airport screeners and law enforcement around the country amid height ened vigilance aimed at preventing another suicide hijacking by al-Qaida. “It was designed to raise security aware ness for law enforcement and airline securi ty,” FBI spokesman Paul Bresson said. U.S. law enforcement officials previous ly have warned that al-Qaida might use improvised or easily obtained substances to mount attacks, especially chemicals that are dangerous when mixed. What makes the FBI weapons list unusual is that most of the concealable knives, pepper spray devices and other items are inexpensive and can be purchased from manufacturers in the United States, Taiwan, Japan, Italy, Sweden, China and elsewhere. Knives are concealed in belt buckles, hairbrushes and combs, working cigarette lighters, crucifixes, lipstick cases, canes, umbrellas, keychains, pens, mock credit cards and money clips. While many of the blades are small, others are at least four inches long and some are sword-length. Among the more exotic items is a deck of fake playing cards made of metal, with sharp edges, that can be thrown with deadly results. One fake key made in Japan con ceals a knife and a smaller key that could be used to escape from handcuffs. One device, called a “shuckra,” is a metal tube containing a wire that, when locked into place, becomes a hardened spike that could be used as a dagger. There are false name-brand soup, hair- spray, shaving cream and cleanser cans with hidden compartments — the FBI calls them “can safes” — where weapons or danger ous substances could be placed. Fake books with hollowed centers are used as safes. Each item in the catalog is shown with a ruler to give security personnel a sense of scale and an X-ray image of how it might appear when viewed in an airport screening device. The FBI’s collection was purchased through catalogs, at knife shows and through other commercial outlets. The 19 men who hijacked four jetliners on Sept. 11, 2001, used common boxcutters as weapons, and the FBI catalog is circulat ing at a time of increased security at airports based on intelligence collected from cap tured al-Qaida operatives and al-Qaida safe houses about plans for another attack using the nation’s air travel system. The Transportation Security Administration forbids air travelers from carrying sharp objects into an aircraft cabin. The agency bans such items as boxcutters, metal scissors with pointed tips, meat cleavers, swords and ice picks. But the FBI catalog notes there are many other razor knives and penknives that are used in construction and other businesses that could be just as deadly in the hands of a terrorist. Even plastic knives are included. “Each of these tools was designed to cut and is fully functional in that respect,” the FBI statement says. “Whether used to cut paper, cardboard or other material, these knives should be treated as potentially dan- Airport screeners beware An FBI list of concealed weapons is being distributed to airport personnel. It includes a wide array of inexpensive, creative and in some cases undetectable instruments of violence. SOURCE: FBI A P gerous weapons.” The Homeland Security Department on Tuesday warned travelers to expect greater scrutiny of cameras, cell phones and other electronics because of evidence al-Qaida had experimented with using cameras to house stun guns or explosives. The government also recently tightened visa rules for international travelers passing through U.S. airports after warnings in late July that al-Qaida teams might try to hijack international flights. The FBI concealed weapons catalog is unrelated to these latest warnings. Officials say a worker at the FBI lab in Quantico, Va., began the catalog shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks so that security personnel would be aware of the vast array of dangerous items that can be legally purchased and might be difficult to detect. Italian scientists say they have cloned a horse By Rick Callahan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Scientists in Italy say they have created the world’s first cloned horse, raising the possi bility of a sequel to the next Seabiscuit or a carbon copy of Kentucky Derby champion Funny Cide. The small, sturdy work horse is now two months old, weighs about 220 pounds and is in excellent health, said its cre ators. Their announcement beats a Texas A&M team awaiting the birth of its own horse clone. The cloned Haflinger horse is named Prometea after Prometheus, the character in Greek mythology who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans. Now that horse-cloning has arrived, it could allow the repli cation of valuable horses or endangered breeds, said Cesare Galli, director of the Laboratory of Reproductive Technology in Cremona, Italy. “The most obvious use is to give a sterile animal or animals that die or can’t breed because of some disease a chance to reproduce,” Galli said. Prometea was bom just two weeks after the first member of the equine family — a mule — was cloned at the University of Idaho. The mules were cloned from cells extracted from developing mule fetuses. But Prometea’s DNA came from her adult moth er’s skin cells. Cloning adult DNA has proven more difficult than copying fetal DNA. The Idaho team harvested fertile eggs, one at a time, from mares. They then removed the nucleus of each egg and inserted DNA from cells of a mule fetus. Those reconstructed eggs were surgically implanted into the wombs of female horses. Galli’s team, however, har vested hundreds of eggs from mare carcasses at a slaughter house. They cultured the eggs, removed their DNA and replaced it with DNA taken from either adult male or female horse skin cells. Of 841 reconstructed embryofj, 22 developed to advanced embryos within about a week. Seventeen of those were introduced into nine mares, resulting in four pregnancies, but only Prometea developed to full term. Dolly the sheep, the first cloned mammal, was euthanized this year after she contracted a common livestock disease and her cells showed signs of prema ture aging. Gordon Woods, who led the University of Idaho mule-cloning team, said the successes in cloning equines could open the door to cloning racing champions. For example, Funny Cide, winner the Kentucky Derby and Preakness races, is a gelding. Geldings were widely thought to be uncompetitive. Funny Cide otherwise would’ve been a lucrative stud horse. Cloning him would keep his champion genes in play. “If one could clone Funny Cide, the clone of him could be the stud. He could pass on the genetics,” Woods said. , But Texas A&M research veterinarian Katrin Hinrichs, leader of the rival horse cloning group, said clones would be rejected by the Jockey Club, which registers thoroughbred horses. Hinrichs is awaiting the birth of a cloned American quarter horse in mid-November. She believes cloning’s most obvious use in the horse industry would be cloning such show horses. Adventist CatficCic Church of Christ 9{pn-‘DenominationaC PentecostaC Seventh Day Adventist 1218 Ettle St., Bryan (corner of Coulter) 775-4362 Pastor Bill Davis Saturday 8:15am- Spanish Worship English - 11:00 am Sabbath School - 9:45 am www.bryansdachurch.com ‘Baptist Parkway Baptist Church 1501 Southwest Pkwy (979) 693-4701 Sunday Worship 8:15 10:45 & 6PM Sunday School 9:30 AM Wednesday: Meal 5:30PM College Bible Study Wed. 6:30PM Www.pbccs.org First Baptist Church UNIVERSITY MINISTRY 2300 Welsh Ave. • College Station SUNDAY: 8:30 & 10:55-Worship Services 9:45-Bible Study 6:00 p.m.-Graduates and Professionals Bible Study WEDNESDAY: 6:00 p.m.-Summer Book Club Ty Cope, University Minister 1bccollegestation.com * 764-1353 K st. Mary’s Catholic Center 603 Church Avenue in Northgate (979)846-5717 www.aaaiecatholic.ora Pastoral Team Rev. Michael J. Sis, Pastor Rev. Keith Koehl, Associate Pastor - Campus Ministers - Deacon Bill Scott, Deacon David Reed, Martha Tonn, Jullie Mendonca Dawn Rouen, Roel Garza Daily Masses Mon.-Fri.: 5:30 p.m. in the Church Weekend Masses Sat: 2:00 p.m. (Korean), 5:30 p.m. (English), 7:00 p.m. (Spanish) Sun.: 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., and 7:00 p.m. Confessions Wed. 8:30-9:30 p.m., Sat. 4:00-5:15 p.m. or by appointment. Christian First Christian Church 900 South Ennis, Bryan 823-5451 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Robert D. Chandler, Minister A&M Church of Christ 1901 Harvey Mitchell Pkwy. (979)693-0400 Sunday Assemblies: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m., College Bible Class 9:30 a.m. Sunday Night: 5:45 p.m. Mid-Week 8:30 p.m. Aggies for Christ Call for on-campus pick-up info www.aggiesforchrist.org ‘EpiscopaC St. Thomas Episcopal 906 George Bush Dr. • College Station, TX 696-1726 Services - 8:00 (Rite 1) 10:00 (Family Service Rite II) Next door to Canterbury House, the Episopal Student Center Methodist A&M United Methodist 417 University Dr. (in Northgate) • 846-8731 Sunday Worship: 8:30, 9:45, 10:50 College Sunday School: 9:30,10:45 Sr. Pastor Dr. Jerry Neff www.am-umc.org communityCHURCH SUNDAYS: Prayer Service @10 a.m. Worship @11 a.m. Now Meeting in Northgate College Main & Church St. at the Baptist Student Ministry (BSM) building Small Groups This Summer: Tues. Nights "Don't Just GOto Church!" www.CXJmCHURCH.com 260-1163 EentecostoC Cornerstone Church • On Campus College Bible Study held weekly • Sunday Service at 3:00pm Meets at College Station Conference Center (George Bush Drive) 485-8744 ^ Victory United Pentecostal Church Sunday 2:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. 1808 - H Brothers (behind the C.S. Wal-Mart) 764-4180 ‘PresByterian Covenant Presbyterian Church 220 Rock Prairie Road (979) 694-7700 Rev. Sam W. Steele - Pastor Sunday Service: 8:30 & 11 a.m. Sunday School: 9:45 a.m. Students Welcome www.covenantpresbyterian.org 1 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN I CHURCH 1 Helping Aggies grow in faith ft Worship 10:00 a.m. ■ Church School 9:00 ■ Fellowship on the Patio 11 a.m. r 1100 Carter Creek Parkway www.fpcbryan.org