FREE! FREE! Seller/Server Training Course Tuesday, March 2, 2004 at 5:30 pm at the Brazos Hall (beside Chicken Oil Company) p, Doors open at 5:00 pm Free Training 50 Seats A vai/able First come, First Serve Provided by C.A.R.E for more info call 764-6277 Coaliton on Alcohol Responsibility and Education ik Tuesday, February 17, 2004 THE BATTALION FI5H Peace Corps needs Americans with skills in Environment Education Business Agric|| | tl|re UM, ARE Voo BuSV,aIRj TRAFFIC DIRECTOR? ^ "XT's SPAT AAJt> J'fA TRY IMG- To AfAR OoT A BLUE LOT < kuHAT Do Vi>u Think? IT 5 3uST rWAT I Dom'T THINK You Realize How much Power you havf. People Dom't HAVE To SToP AT SToP SIOAiS IF Voui VIMt TMEMI THKoOGV m You 5iR, ARE above THE law/ jruam FCIC Continued from page 1A You Cam aiake these cars Do AmYT4im(, '’'“u NMAaiT 1 rr noise f poumion 09 JOSft DDKUJin 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 serving. Visit the TAMU Career Center 209 Koldus Building to pick up a Peace Corps Catalog. new Kuss, I've- GOT ANOTHER wek ON HOW To crtAN&e V OUR OKAV. THE BIG TTRerND RIGHT Nouo 15 BANDS MKG TeT, RooWeN, AND Auu U)E HAVE^ TO DO 15 GiROIa) MOP HAIRCUTS wear denim tackets. And flaw iago's garage Rook. OR U)E COUUD TOST SOU- oui? SOULS TO the oeviL. against affirmative action, bit didn’t know what exactly it was. ^ “If (students) support diversi ty, they should come out (to the event),” Jewell said. “If they’re trying to make up their minds, they should come out and lean it’s an opportunity to have civi lized dialogue.” Josefy said despite the recent legislation, the SGA still sup ports efforts for increasing diversity on campus. “A lot of people are with us in spirit,” Oliver said. “How mans will actually get out there and walk is the question.” Girl Scouts Continued from page 1A www.peacecorps.gov • 800.424.8580 by Will the MSC and has been in Girl Scouts since she was in kinder garten. She said she loves Girl Scouts because it teaches girls about many aspects of life. Student Continued from page 1A Josefy said with everyone helping each other, the University will get through this. “This will be one of those times we gather together,” he said. Sonia Moghe contributed to this story. NEWS IN BRIEF Spend Next Semester In New York City We offer internships in: □ Television □ Public Relations □ Film □ Journalism Earn 15 credits with our full-time Fall or Spring semester program which includes internships, online courses and housing in the heart of Manhattan! Apply Today! Fall ’04 deadline: April 1st Learn more - visit our website: v ww, academic. marist.edu/nvmep ir V NEW YORK MEDIA EXPERIENCE PROGRAM Sponsored by Marist College Continued from page 1A Renewed interest brought to Amber Alert program work field before you graduate from school sets up a really good path because you know what you’re getting into and if you want to continue on pursuing that major.” The program is a win-win situation for A&M and ConocoPhillips, Evans said. The SPIRIT Scholars Program will allow ConocoPhillips to identify students who will be significant players in the integrated ener gy industry and correspondingly allow stu dents to benefit from the scholarships and experience the corporation provides. Zalenski aspires to be one of the few students selected amongst the engineering majors for the program. “I know that I’ll make a lot of good connections, and the money would really help if I would get a scholarship from that,” she said. “I really need financial aid right now.” SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) — By the time an Amber Alert was issued for 11-year-old Carlie Brucia, a full day had passed since the moment she was led away by a dark-haired stranger in an abduction that was videotaped by a security camera. The alert on Feb. 2 caught the public’s attention and is being credited with helping lead detectives to a suspect, Joseph P. Smith. But Carlie’s body was found several days later, and now the alert system is under scrutiny for the ways it is used and the timing of its implementation. The new attention to the 7-year-old system comes at a time when a national Amber Alert system is in the works and more police agencies are turning to alerts to find missing children. While it is credited with helping rescue more than 120 children from kidnappers since 1996 — including Wednesday’s kidnapping of month-old Jesse Peaster, who was found safe just hours he was taken from his home near Lincoln, Mo. — records show the use of the alert system has been haphazard. Some police departments have been quick to issue alerts when a child isn’t in danger, while other agencies such as Sarasota have been more conservative in their approach and not issued alerts quickly, even when a child’s life was at stake. The Justice Department says time is of the essence in abductions, citing statistics that show three-quarters of the children killed by their kidnappers are slain within the three hours of their disappearance. India, Pakistan begin peace talks to settle disputes By Ashok Sharma THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BRAND NAMES, CLOSEOUT PRICES! GROCERY OUTLET Bargain 5 FREE Shasta Soda, 3 Liter or 6 pack When you show your TAMU ID. Good only Feb. 16, 17, 18, & 22-while supplies last. Limit one per customer. PLU 203505 ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Nuclear- armed rivals India and Pakistan began his toric meetings Monday aimed at preparing the way for a sustained peace dialogue on Kashmir and other disputes that have kept the neighbors at loggerheads for decades. Pakistan is eager to show quick progress during the three days of talks, which also are likely to cover confidence-building meas ures in the nuclear field to avoid an accident — especially considering admissions of leaks of nuclear technology by the father of Pakistan’s nuclear program. India and Pakistan last held formal peace talks in July 2001 in Agra, India. Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee agreed to launch the new dialogue when they met on the sidelines of a South Asian summit in January. Jalil Abbas Jilani, a director-general in Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, and Arun Kumar Singh, a joint secretary in India’s External Affairs Ministry, shook hands and smiled before the start of the meeting. The sides met for nearly two hours in the morn ing before breaking for lunch. Singh is leading a four-member Indian team at the talks, the first real test of the two sides’ willingness to show flexibility on long-entrenched positions, such as the dis puted Kashmir region — the cause of two of the countries’ three wars since their 1947 independence. A “line of control” divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan, but both claim the Himalayan territory in its entirety. More than 65,000 people have been killed in an insurgency that has raged in India-con- trolled portions of the territory since 1989. In the latest violence, suspected sepa ratist rebels shot and killed a local politician Monday as he stood on a roadside in Srinagar, the summer capital of India’s Jammu-Kashmir state, police said. Two police officers nearby raced to the scene and opened fire on the assailants. One officer was killed and the other wounded as the attackers retaliated, and the attackers escaped. Meanwhile, in Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, more than 500 people Monday from a political group seek ing Kashmir’s independence blocked a main street for nearly two hours to protest the Pakistan-India talks. “These negotiations are being held to end the Kashmiris’ struggle,” said Ghulam Nabi War, a Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front leader. “The two countries are interested in people of Kashmir. Theyd respect their wishes.” After coming close to fighting a fc war in 2002, India and Pakistan have moved to restore transport links and diplomatic ties, Soldiers in November halted cross-bordet firing in Kashmir. India is also set to embark on its first crick et tour of Pakistan since 1989 — a break through for the two cricket-crazy nations. “Pakistan is approaching these talks sit cerely and earnestly. We hope that Indi would demonstrate matching reciprocity, Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesmai Masood Khan said Sunday. The two sides are likely to set up expert groups to discuss a dispute over the flow of water to Pakistan from the Wullar barrageii India’s Jammu-Kashmir state and fightingat the world’s highest battleground in Siacheii an 18,000-foot high glacier. With national elections due in India i April, no major decisions are expected bf Vajpayee’s government during this roti of talks. However, the prime minister expected to stay in power and pursue! peace process. LEARN TO FLY NOW At United Flight Systems THE EXPERIENCED FLIGHT SCHOOI 1 ' ... . -> . . -Si -2003 Best of the Brazos Valley Winner! College Station 2700 Texas Ave. South 979-764-4440 Pill 1 2L I hi At Stop by, you’ll be glad you did! ■ Discovery Flights Take a 30 minute aerial tour of Bryan- College Station for as little as $ 25. c umnv.um The Battalion Elizabeth N. Webb, Editor in Chief Kendra Kingsley, Managing Editor Melissa Sullivan, City Editor Kim Katopodis, Aggielife Editor Nishat Fatima, Entertainment Editor George Deutsch, Opinion Editor Troy Miller, Sports Editor Rachel Valencia, Copy Chief Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Editor Joshua Hobson, Photo Editor Jacquelyn Spruce, Radio Producer Jaynath Kannaiyae, Web Editor Manish Jindal, Webmaster THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday duringthe 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. 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