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Diploma jMl FREE shipping through May 15th OFFICIALLY LICENSED BY TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY VILLAGE APARTMENTS □ Pick up or purchase your 2003 Aggieland Yearbook If you ordered the award-winning 2003 Aggieland and haven't picked it up, stop by room 015 Reed McDonald Building and do so. Please bring your Student ID. If you did not odrer last year's Texas A&M University yearbook (the 2002-2003 school year), you may purchase one for S40 plus tax. Order your 2004 Aggieland The 2004 Aggieland yearbook will be a 752-page record of the 2003-2004 Texas A&M school year. Distribution will be during Fall 2004. Stop by 015 Reed McDonald or telephone 843-0569 (credit cards only). Cost: $40 plus tax. p Pay a mailing fee for 2004 Aggieland If you ordered a 2004 Aggieland and will not be on campus this fall to pick it up, you can have it mailed. To have your yearbook for the '03-'04 school year mailed, stop by 015 Reed McDonald or telephone 845-0569 (credit cards only) and pay a $7.58 mailing and handling fee. Aggielands will not be held and refunds will not be made on books not picked up within one semester of the publication date. n Pre-order your 2005 Aggieland Order your 2005 Aggieland — the 103rd Texas A&M yearbook — while you register for fall classes. Save $10. Cost: just $30 plus tax. Student Media Ad/Distribution Office: Room 015 Reed McDonald Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday - Friday Cash, Check, VISA, MasterCard, Discover American Express and Aggie Bucks accepted. ■.. if : • 4-I i k L.I !J f i J—~iLi 8 Wednesday, April 21, 2004 THE BAH, | Muster Continued from page 1 Libby said having Hufstedler honored at Muster is perfectly in line with the Aggie tradi tions he cherished so much. Carmen Pendergraff, Blanco-Caldas’ sister, will hold a candle at Aggie Muster in memory of her brother. Blanco-Caldas, the passionate Puerto Rican-tumed-Texan, who was never without his guitar, was killed in Iraq on Dec. 28, 2(X)3. Pendergraff said she misses her bigger-than- life brother greatly and that although attending Muster is one of the hardest things her family will have to do, she couldn’t imagine not going. “It’s finally saying goodbye.” Pendergraff said. “It’s the last chapter of his book. 1 don’t think he would’ve wanted it any other way.” This is the first time Pendergraff has attended Aggie Muster, and she said she is honored that Blanco-Caldas is a part of such an amazing tradition. “It validates the fact that once an Aggie, always an Aggie,” Pendergraff said. “Ernie couldn't have chosen a better place to go to school and a better family to belong to. A&M really made him into the man he was.” Blanco-Caldas built five Aggie Bonfires while attending A&M and was also a Singing Cadet and a Ross Volunteer. Blanco-Caldas’ aunt, Joan Maymi of Sandy, Utah, said not a day goes by that she doesn't look at his picture and think of her nephew. She said that some times she still calls his cell phone just to hear his voice, and that she leaves a message telling him that she misses him. Maymi said that although she Jessica said it's been hard raising her I', old son, Justin, without Rozier, and thatsli going to Muster will help give herclosmt, “It’s not something I ever wanted to»( soon,” she said. “I guess I’mdoingOK.I about him all the time, but Icanthinkah thoughts and not just about his death,’’ Rozier’s mother, Barbara, said her in brilliant son loved the traditions < feel of the University. “The first time he set foot on campus, that was where he was supposed to be,"sin Barbara said Rozier was, by nature,a and meticulous young man, and that the and information that he picked up atA® enced him to go into the Army. “He knew he needed to be therr believed that freedom is not free,” she said that every generation was called and his turn to defend our freedom.” Barbara said her son truly earnedhisit the roll call. “Jon lived a lot of life in 25 years,”she Muster Chair Cindy Abbott said ills ate that these soldiers art 44 Muster signifies that we are all Aggies, and once an Aggie, always an Aggie. You will never be forgotten. — Cindy Abbott Muster chair at this year's Aggies have a historydj ing the ultimate sar (heir country. “I think they de Abbott said. Muster will begin n a.m. with a flag-n mony featuring Band, Corps of Cade| Class of 1954. At 11 a.m., Muster I holding a barbecue a| Academic Plaza or at Sk rains. The barbecue »ilj day long. is nervous about going to Muster, she knows that it is just one of the things keeping her nephew alive in spirit. “I'm scared because I know it's going to bring up those feelings again, but in the same, it’s some thing that helps us realize we re not going through this in vain, and were not going through this alone,” Maymi said. Jonathan Rozier’s wife. Jessica, will hold a candle at Muster for her husband, w ho was killed on July 19. 2003 while on patrol duty outside of his tank. Jessica, who met Rozier while they were in the Corps of Cadets together, said her husband was a die-hard Aggie who nobody ever seemed to have a problem with. Students can visit the Reflectionsdispt j Memorial Student Center, which will fea sonal items of those on this year's rollcal The doors at Reed Arena will openai.Avl and the Muster feature speaker will td llagler. Class of 1958. Shannon Vogt, senior marketing iw| Roll Call and Families Sub Chair,encour^J dents to attend because she saidit'saspe; ! that helps bond the Aggie family together Abbott said that w ith more than DO.'J worldw ide, this is something even Ag| share in and that epitomizes the A] “Muster signifies that we are all AggftJ once an Aggie, always an Aggie,’i “You will never be forgotten.” NEWS IN BRIEF Government lists beluga sturgeon as threatened ipede WASHINGTON (AP) — The government set the stage Tuesday for reducing or even banning imports of prized beluga caviar in six months, listing the beluga sturgeon as a species whose survival is considered threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The move came as a result of a petition from environmental groups. Afterward,tejssl! decision by the Fish and Wildlife Servwij go far enough because (hey had wa.| immediate ban. As of 2002, the United States impel] percent of the world’s beluga caviar, dor| 80 percent two years earlier.. ai Feel the sand between your toes. And try to keep it out of your shorts. >1- Please pick up an application from room 004 in Reed McDonald or online at aggieland.tamu.edu. Applicants will be interviewed between April 28-May 8. Aggieland2O05 Now Hiring If you are interested in editing, designing pages, writing stories^ taking pictures for Texas A&M's Aggieland yearbook, simply fill out) an application and drop it off in 004 Reed McDonald Building • Gain publications experience • Enhance your resume • Earn extracas‘| Openings include: Editing positions: Managing Editor, Marketing Director, Photo Editor*, Copy Editor*, Section Editors (The Other Education, Greek/Housing, Sports, Academics, Corps) ‘Assistant positions available Staff positions: Photographer, Writer Applications are due by 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 27 If you have any questions, please call 845-2681 or drop byourr ft