sa-a& Student Counseling i&JletpjCiHe. Are you a good listener? Do you like to help others? Votunhan Headadl Application & Brochure - Room 114 Henderson Hall. Call Susan Vavra at 845-4470 x133 or visit scs.tamu.edu. Training is August 23-28, 2004. 10 Tuesday, April 20, 2004 Bush names Negroponte as envoy to In We offer beautiful gifts at. Pteartworfo Remember your associates on Administrative Professionals' Day Wednesday, April 21 Select from... • One-Minute Manicure • Candles • Camille Beckman hand therapy • Candies • Demdaco Angels • Much More Let us put a gift together for you today! Do you love to country & western dance? Would you like to perform for others? Would you like to represent Texas A&M all across Texas, the nation, and even the world? Then we would like to invite you to...TRYOUTS! INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS: Monday, April 26th, GRW 401, 6:00 - 7:00 pm Thursday, April 29th, GRW 266, 7:30 - 8:30 pm COME EVEN IF YOU'RE JUST THINKING ABOUT TRYOUT OUT! For More Information: http://wranglers.tamu.edu By Pete Yost THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON President Bush named John Negroponte, the United States’ top diplomat at the United Nations, as the U.S. ambassador to Iraq on Monday and asserted that Iraq “will be free and dem ocratic and peaceful.” Bush announced the nomina tion in an Oval Office ceremony. At the United Nations, Negroponte, 64, was instrumen tal in winning unanimous approval of a Security Council resolution that demanded Saddam Hussein comply with U.N. mandates to disarm. While the resolution helped the Bush administration make its case for invading Iraq, the Security Council eventually refused to endorse the overthrow of Saddam, opting instead to extend U.N. weapons searches. “John Negroponte is a man of enormous experience and skill” and “has done a really good job of speaking for the United States to the world about our intentions to spread freedom and peace,” said Bush. Regarding Negroponte’s new post, the president said there is “no doubt in my mind he can handle it. no doubt in my mind he will do a very good job, and there’s no doubt in my mind that Iraq will be free and democratic and peaceful.” Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Dick Lugar, R-Ind., supports the nomination and said he will work with Secretary of State Colin Powell to provide a prompt public hearing for Negroponte. If confirmed by the Senate, Negroponte would head a U.S. embassy in Baghdad that will be temporarily housed in a palace that belonged to Saddam. When up and running, the embassy will be the largest in the world. Negroponte would become ambassador in Baghdad when the United States hands over political power to an interim Iraqi govern ment by a June 30 deadline. The current top U.S. official in Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, is expected to leave the country once the politi cal transition is completed. Thousands of U.S. troops will remain in the country even after the political transition is complete. As U.N. ambassador in New York. Negroponte also helped win approval of a resolution to expand the mandate of an inter national security force in Afghanistan after the overthrow of the Taliban government. Before that, he worked in pri vate business. Negroponte’s nomination for the U.N. post was confirmed by the Senate in September 2(K)l, but that confirmation didn’t come easy. It was delayed a half-year mostly because of criticism of his record as the U.S. ambassa File Photo