Get a $10 Visa® Gift Card 1 when you switch
to a checking account that has everything
you need. Without the surprises.
CampusEdgeâ„¢ checking is free through January 1, 2005. And
it will stay free for five years if your parents have an account
with Bank of America or as long as you have a monthly direct
deposit. There’s no minimum balance. And there are tons of
extras. Like a free Stuff Happensâ„¢ card, so if you goof up,
we’ll refund your overdraft fee —just this once.
So get it all, plus $10. Bring this ad into our banking center
near Texas A & M University at 111 University Drive E., or
visit any of our other banking centers today.
Bank of America Higher Standards
'Offer expires 3/15/04. $10 Visa® Gift Card will arrive within three weeks of account opening. Gift Cards are issued by
Bank of America, N.A. (USA) under a license by Visa U.S.A. Inc. Fees may apply depending on how and when your card is used.
See terms and conditions on gift card carrier. Any applicable taxes are the responsibility of the account holder. Limit one gift
card incentive per new account opened.
Bank of America, N.A. Member FDIC ©2004 Bank of America Corporation CECTA10
8A
Monday, January 26, 2004
THE BATTALIil
Bright stuff
â– tM, bu
I With i
thfc secret
Brel Ant:
ft, hopp<
th; banki
jS-l-O Bij
I Hmme
|t the tn
1 can
â– ad con
liinett
ply get I
| Afters
tissed
ftrales t
ft. all
Ri der he
iaEmme
I But e\
Art Wright • THE BATM
Te islet
dit
Clay Bright receives a standing ovation from 1 2th Man Foundation members prior to speaking on behalf o(“ftimett S
father, Bum Bright, Class of 1943, at the dedication ceremony for the Bright Football Complex The complexfttdy) SI
named for the Bright family, who provided the initial $5 million donation for the $27 million project. law a li
I Emmt
NASA
Continued from page 1A
designed it to withstand as
much as 40 G’s, said Chris
Jones, director of flight proj
ects at JPL.
The six-wheeled rover land
ed at 12:05 a.m. EST in
Meridiani Planum, believed to
be the smoothest, flattest spot
on Mars. Opportunity lies 6,600
miles and halfway around the
planet from where its twin.
Spirit, landed Jan. 3.
On Sunday, NASA said
Opportunity was in excellent
health and Spirit was on the
mend after a serious software
problems had hobbled it.
Initial analysis of the images
suggested Opportunity landed
in a shallow crater roughly 66
feet across. Its low rim should
n’t block the rolling robot once
it gets going, Squyres said.
Opportunity could roll off its
lander in 10 to 14 days, mission
manager Arthur Amador said.
Opportunity’s possible targets
include a larger crater, maybe
500 feet across, that lies an esti
mated half-mile from where the
spacecraft landed.
The rover’s ramp off its lan
der appeared unobstructed,
unlike that of the Spirit rover,
said Matt Wallace, another of
the mission managers. Spirit
had to use an alternate ramp
because a deflated air bag
blocked its safest route to the
martian surface.
Together, the twin 384-
pound rovers make up a $820
million mission to seek out geo
logic evidence that Mars was
once a wetter world possibly
capable of sustaining life.
NASA launched Spirit on June
10 and Opportunity on July 7.
Each carries nine cameras and
six scientific instruments.
On Wednesday, Spirit devel
oped serious problems, cutting
off what had been a steady flow
of pictures and scientific data. It
resumed delivering data Friday,
but on a limited basis.
Engineers now believe the
problem arose with software
that manages the file system
within the rover’s flash memo
ry, project manager Pete
Theisinger said. Other possible
culprits include broken hard
ware or solar radiation.
“Spirit is still serious but
we are moving to guarded con
dition.’’ Theisinger said,
adding that Spirit could
resume normal operations in
two to three weeks.
Hours after Opportunity’s
landing, NASA administrator
Sean O’Keefe broke open a
bottle of champagne and toast
ed the mission.
“As the old saying goes.
bk J the
â– im sho
(h< front
I Watki;
[shmar
bk keted
op ion w
H "They
in oLeai
Both
it’s far better to be luckyikfr' " 1
good, but you know, the hJ 1,1
er we work the luckier ft 0 ^ un
seem to get.” O’Keefe
adding “no one dared hopift 011 ^ 6
that both rover landings'
be so successful.
NASA sent Spirit to Gik
Crater, a broad depress
believed to once havecontan
a lake. Opportunity was si
Meridiani Planum, which!
lists believe abounds inamue!
al called gray hematite.
The iron-rich mineral lyL
cally forms in marine onft me ’ 1)1
canic environments ma^ke<i'ft ,l, * ,lin
hydrothermal activift * lacl
Hematite is common in tlx ,or 1
soil found .k loss the soulheiftM 1 l llv
em United States and is fB m
quently used as a pigmeni.sft Alter
Doug Ming, of NASlft nTle( l<
Johnson Space Center left
member of the science team ftugh tl
NASA launched two to' ^ Aggie
to double its chances of siftints by
cessfully landing on Mars.MThe s
carry identical plaques menwftery tin
alizing the seven astroiwft other
who died aboard space shu t* n gair
Columbia nearly a year aft With
Opportunity mission manaftin com
Jim Erickson said. ftows fi
As of early Sunday, llifftw ans'
were a record five spacecift
operating on or around Mij
including two NASA said
lites and one from ill
European Space Ageift
orbiting the planet.
Step
Continued from page 1A
One of the dance team members taught the
basics of stepping to audience members who
were invited on stage to show off their newly-
learned moves.
The last presentation of the evening entertain
ment was the hip hop freestyle contest. After a lit
tle coaxing from the contest host, volunteers from
the audience appeared on stage and the first place
winner received a prize of $100.
“It was great to see a variety of talent in one
show,” said Christina Joykutty, a junior mathemat
ics major.
The conference also included keynote speal
talking on topics of diversity.
Poet Nikki Giovanni spoke at Rudder Th«
Saturday night on topics ranging from whybli
can relate to uncertainties of space exploratiom j exai
mistrusting President George W. Bush. ] a j r ca
Dr. Kimberly Brown, an associate profess# ent p ai
English, said she encouraged her students in n Sund
African American Literature class to altif jji s v
because it was rare to see a black poet on theTfte at ^
A&M campus.
“I told them they could see someone living
that is an important thing,” she said. “It was ft>nteste
honor to see her in person.”
QUANTUM COW: 260-COWS
quaattumcow.com
Upstarts in the Sparks Building, Northgate. Comer ot CoUoao Main A Univmrsitv Dr.
CHEMISTRY
BIOLOGY
TUTORING
LAB SOLUTION
MANUALS
The
Imes du
J 16 em
(onghoi
revaile<
ORGANIC
HISTORY
PSYCHOLOGY
ACCOUNTING
CAPA, OWL
& CHEMSKILll^f-
“Sorr
|iid L
onradt
The ,
te as
uld n
|uard 1
ree-po
I ter wit]
I “(Sch
I'henshi
| ,r point
Willi;
flaying
WOMi UNTO ftCUQH t\OUf&S\
HVtVIW tlHSTOM, ttW fWWMVAN Sn SWWYVtSPfcWW
TEST PACKETS ^
1 ] g her ]
He NO
ie Big
CAAj
|oints, ;
d 400
BILLY'S VIDE®
FREE with th0 purchase of smtoci Packets. Also available separate