The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 04, 2004, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Sophomore, tom btwn poly sci and history major • Reads Marx while
exercycling in Melrose fitness center • Wants to come back to Melrose
after a year of foreign study * Championship rock-scissors-paper player
LAUNCH PAD FOR INTERESTING LIVES.
2 to 4 bdrms ■ pool - fitness center - academic and annual leases busline - computer lab
please visit us at 601 Luther St. West,
www.melroseapartments.com or call 979.680.3680
Join Melrose Idol - Win $1000!
Now Leasing for May and August2004. No Deposit.*
MM 0
Delta Gamma
wishes best of luck to their
2004Anchor Splash participants
• One Army
• B-l
. H-l
• Delta Tau Delta
• Iron Spikes
• Delta Chi
• Class Council 2006
• Kappa Sigma
Sigma Nu
riji
Lambda Chi Alpha
G-2
Farm House
K-2
' MSC Fish
' Phi Kappa Theta
fee o
10A
Thursday, March 4, 2004
THE BATTAI
Haitian rebels to disan
Students embrace, rejoice and celebrate in front of the National Palace in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti on Mi fthefii
The arrival of Guy Phillipe and his rebels brought supporters to the streets to celebrate the departureofH
President Jean Bertrand Aristide.
By Mark Stevenson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Marine vehicles pushed burned cars from ^ ^ p
eer-higf
u
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haiti's key rebel
leader promised Wednesday his forces would lay
down their arms after 1,000 U.S. Marines began
patrolling the impoverished capital to restore
order and prepare for the arrival of international
peacekeepers.
If Guy Philippe, a rebel boss and former police
chief, can make good on his vow, it would mark
the end of the rebellion that broke out Feb. 5,
drove President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide into African exile Sunday
and left at least 130 Haitians dead.
The 15-nation Caribbean
Community, meanwhile, refused to
join an international peacekeeping
force in Haiti and called for an
independent international inquiry
into Aristide’s allegations that he
was forced out office by the United
States.
Jamaican Prime Minister P.J.
Patterson said CARICOM was
“extremely disappointed” at the
involvement of “Western partners”
in the hasty departure of Aristide.
Patterson, speaking for the trad
ing bloc after an emergency meet
ing in the Jamaican capital, criti-
ha
nts on
il by so
nl Anto
o
light fin
wa
wou
led
Some of us
may not be happy
about the decision
to lay down arms,
but we are army...
well always obey
orders.
rfe hac
cized the U.N. Security Council, saying it had
ignored an urgent Caribbean appeal to it on
Thursday to send peacekeepers to Haiti before
Aristide was forced out.
Aristide remained in the Central African
Republic, where he had been flown to exile in a
U.S.-government-chartered jet, unable so far to
find a country that will grant him permanent
residence.
The Marines moved out of their bivouac at
the presidential palace Wednesday in a first
reconnaissance mission since they began arriv
ing on Sunday. They walked and drove machine-
gun mounted Humvees 30 blocks over trash-
strewn streets.
ways and riflemen watched the streets foi
signs of resistance. Encountering
Marines returned to the palace that hadbea ^ po
seat Aristide’s power before his departureSm ^ ca(
marking the second time he had been 1
from power.
The death toll in the rebellion has
rise despite Aristide’s ouster, reaching at
Wednesday as workers at the Port-au-Prince
pital said an additional 30 bodies
brought to the morgue since Sunday.
Holding out the hope Ik
spasms of violence
end. Philippe said rebels f^ r
peace. :
“Now that there are fon
troops promising to protec]
Haitian people ... and
given the guarantee to prolea
Haitian people ... we
down our amis,” Philippe tol
news conference.
Some of his fighters looket
glumly as Philippe said: “!
may be the last statement- ,
we're giving here in the na ^PO
the Liberation Front.”
One of the rebels said,
er. there was no question
would obey orders.
“Sure, some of us
35
lahoma
Gi:
ids and s
ite at 12
lOftbal
— Francois Ferdinand
Haitian army
happy about the decision to lay down antis,be feday
are army,” said Francois Ferdinand, 44,a 12- neddue
army veteran. “We have a hierarchy.coitimatit (lie dou
officers and we'll always obey orders", diedulei
The rebels have said they want torebi n Tuesd
army, which Aristide disbanded in 1995,a n$axe
after he was returned to power by 20,000 L n 0
troops. He had been deposed in a militaryca L state
1991 after becoming Haiti's first democrati ir j as ( g-
elected leader in 200 years of independence,
Philippe said he would go to other cities)
pied by the rebels to tell fighters of his agree [
to lay down arms. He made the declaratio!
visiting the residence of U.S. Ambassador!
Foley’s earlier in the day.
Spring Cleaning Sail
^ erStt im 0lafo ^ 1 . Northgate
Aggie Unlimited Culpepper PI
Off - Campus in Aggieland* VlllagC CeUteil
www.shopaggieland.com Post Oak Mali!
20% Off Ticketed Prii
of ALL Merchcutdis(>
‘65
*41
Take 20% off the ticketed price of all merchandise in stock until Marc
14th. This offer does not combine with other coupons or discounts
other than those where the merchandise has been reduced on the
price tag. Most sweats and many women's clothes have previously
been marked down 40% on the tag. Take an additional 20% withtt
otter, All in stock items qualify in any department, including textbooks
calculators, and school supplies.
*3S
Many sweats and women’s wear
have been reduced 40% on
their ticket already, plus now get
20% more in savings.
9
^ollei
least