The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 20, 2003, Image 2
Study Abroad to , Double Your ; Employment ; _ Opportunities ! ,.v, & wva FREE info kit J , e-mail us: /^/b(ii)Abroad/«Russia.com, ' or call Toll Free: 1-866-889-9880 ' College Ski & Board Week I BBimmsi [To get j SAI20 Mountains « 5 Bosons for the Price of 1 If You Have Something To Sell, Remember: Classifieds Can Do It Call 845-0569 The Battalion Brech, Vall,*%* BeamCreek, mm Arapahoe Basin M ^ * Keystone ^u.sski ismff-m I -eOO-'7’S-^-0-^S3 Monday, October 20, 2003 THE BAT TALK) FISH wwtmh studen i UlHEM ARE You 6oiM6 To START £ATia>C? UP CEREAL T Peace Corps needs Americans with skills in Environment Education Health Agriculture Ujell , I Sought You SoME Cereal That'S C,oob FoR You. XT's Full of’'' SHREDbED XT’s noT 1iu5T The Taste Though / XT's The ljhole Ex PEfllE^tE ... /VoT To /MENTioaJ The Toy surprise imside The Box noise i pouurion BO JOSH OflRUiin Peace Corps needs 5,500 graduates with skills in agriculture, business, education, environment, health and information technology. All majors are welcome. Benefits include medical, dental and housing, as well as a monthly stipend and 24 vacation days a year. Graduates can defer student loans while senring. Visit the TAMU Career Center 209 Koldus Building to pick up a Peace Corps Catalog. eacec You've GcflTA CO N't BA'L U9 out ! we Got thrown im tail For TRASHING OUR hotel Room? Yes, i peaute it wae a vep'j <jtupip THING -no Co. ANYWAY, PL€ASe TuST coime Sail us out, orR thanks. and lis-ten, this 'S N'T only RHonC CALL, So COULP You cau my m<»m And Ask her to tape" "friends" for us? TVieY PeAu-y ooaht to Glue us tvjq F*HoNE calls T SPECIAL COMBO PRICED CicjV, Pizk* Z)y ^ou^e Buffet, Drink & Tax College Station So we find that when the operands X and V are applied as inputs to the adder, it ta-- You know a class is boring when Um... the Professor dozes off. Professor? II N N Vex m 1 c js 1 (1 Continued from page! Levi Windle Fund, whicli associated with Bank America to aid the family in of its costs. Students cam] donate money through Pajfi using the e-mail address in windle@tamu.edu. Windle li: no medical insurance attheii of the accident, and his fria are planning several fund-n ing events in the coming wett Crump said they will be coofci fajitas beneath the W Underpass during the Oklalioii State football game and accepting donations. There »i also be a booth set up close Walton Hall, where Windleig, to live. There are also tenlat plans for a benefit concert Windle’s honor. Funeral services will belie! today at 2 p.m. in I Auditorium. Pontious said Ik service was originally going be at All Faiths’ Chapel, ta larger location was need because of the high number people expected to attend Windle’s ashes are to be si tered on his family’s ranch Kansas. “He was the best Aggie,”saiJ Gayle Windle, Levi’s n “He had a smile that you ji wouldn’t believe.” Alcohol 694-CICI (2424) We, Accept D r w-an AGGIE BUCKS' p ™ an College Station Location only m W m WK£ 4* I I !«•! B". M =1 7 '*'V, 1 Ck’s w/Approved I.D. yeHAH) BY: MILL LL6Y9 Donation Continued from page 1 College Station, and he and his wife decided to donate her organs. Leslie was less than two months away from beginning her freshman year at A&M when the accident occurred. Leslie’s heart, right lung, liver, both kidneys and pancreas were donated. Her mother, Marilyn Snell, said she believed that is what her daughter would have wanted. “She had such a serving atti tude, we knew she would want this,” she said. “Whoever got her heart got the best part.” These are only a few of the stories being shared in this NEWS IN BRIEF study. Those interested will have a chance to meet these individuals and learn more about dffan donation at infor mation tables set up in the Commons and Zachary on Nov. 4. More information is available at the Southwest Transplant Alliance’s Web site, www.organ.org. Continued from page CARPOOL, Responsible Aggie Decisions and Alternative Spring Break will sponsoi awareness tables at Wehna Rudder Fountain and Blockerto educate students. Jonathan Todd, a senior jour nal ism major and member of Alternative Spring Break, the group provides students will a fun and interactive out-of-state service experience during tie week of spring break. \ Responsible Aggie Decisiffi provides students with inforti- tion and educates them on E risks associated with wiil'alco hol and drugs. A list of events for Alcohol Awareness Week can be foundai s t u d e n 11 i fe. t am u. ed u/adep/eveoi s/aaaw.htm. Prof Ambushes kill 2 Americans, trigger spectacular blasts; Iraqi wants recall of army BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Deadly ambush teams struck U.S. Army targets from west to north in the arc of resistance around Baghdad, and the interim Iraqi leader called Sunday for an immediate mobilization of the old Iraqi army to help the harried Americans. The United States would “speed the process of relieving the burden on its troops” by recall ing the disbanded Iraqi military, said lyad Allawi, current president of the Iraqi Governing Council. The idea got a cool reception, howev er, from Baghdad’s U.S.-led occupation authorities. Attackers killed two U.S. soldiers in a clash outside the northern city of Kirkuk late Saturday, and others blasted a broken-down convoy in the western flashpoint city of Fallujah, setting off spectacular explosions from an ammunition truck. Continued from page 1 could do and without recognition.' Michael Hall, executive asso ciate dean of the College of Science, said Martell was an exceptional man who will be missed. “He set very high standards and was very fair,” Hall said. “He developed the chemistry depart ment from a good department to a nationally recognized.” Martell is survived by his wife, eight children and 13 grandchildren. ^ Deferred adjudication ^ records can now be sealed. Records of deferred adiuication are not automatically off your record. However, a new state ^law allows them to now be sealed in many instances^ For more information contact Cameron Reynolds Attorney At Law Licensed by the Texas Supreme Court. Not Board Certified Class of ‘91 Jim James Attorney At Law Board Certified Criminal Law Class of‘75 979-846-1934 e-mail: jim@jimjames.com or Cameron@jimjames.com website: http://jimwjames.wld.com THF RATTAT TON Sommer Hamilton, Elizabeth Webb, Managing Editor Sarah Szuminski, Metro Editor Kim Katopodis, Aggielife Editor Jenelle Wilson, Opinion Editor True Brown, Sports Editor Dallas Shipp, Sports Editor Editor in Chief George Deutsch, Sci|Tech Editor Micala Proesch, Copy Chief Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Editor John Livas, Photo Editor Kendra Kingsley , Radio Producer Jason Ritterbusch, Webmaster THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday duringtlie fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, Texas A&M University, 1111 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: news@thebattalion.net; Web site: http://www.thebattalion.net Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by Trie Battalion. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classi fied advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 25$. Mail subscriptions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester, $17.50 for the summer or $10 a month. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express, call 845-2611. mk aW SENIORS. I/Ve want your portrait for the Aggie land Yearbook. Graduation portraits for the 2004 Aggieland Yearbook will be taken Monday, Oct. 13, through Friday Oct. 24, 2003, in Room 027 of the Memorial Student Center. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, except Thursday, Oct. 16, which will be 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. There is no sitting fee required to photographed for the yearbook. To insure being pho tographed you should make an appointment by calling Thornton Studio at 1-800-883-9449 or seeing the photographer beginning Monday, Oct. 13. Senior attire: For the yearbook pose, women should wear a favorite top or dress; men should wear a suit or sports jacket and tie. Graduating members of the Corps of Cadets should wear their Midnights. A Texas A&M graduation cap & gown will be provided by the photographer. Aggieland 2004 Texas A&M University Yearbook 1 Stl Whe Aggie B and his meal pH soft drir Both hungry; Alon sweat, C Bonfire his wed< teamwo: Chea Nov. 18, 27 other ic event, “For came fn men anc Last soon am initiate 1 the trea< and safe Beth Unity Pi shape of thousam “Bur thinking and com Stude Student Jim I opment: “Nob ed,” Boi Aggies.” Chea “It’s i smells, [ • F/S be Sp dr • AI Se th • Ul CK or C ht * N G Be be cc * Fc W * Tv or Qr