Need a Tutor? 99Tutors.com helpful, friendly tutors for all. subjects Apply at www.99Tutors.com 979-255-3655 Moving? Rent a Trailer. $ 25/day 695-7778 K&R Trailer Rental I^TAggieland Depot"C^ Diploma Framing www.aggieland-depot.com Hq! Post Oak Village • 900 Harvey Road. 695-1422 If You Have Something To Sell, Remember: Classifieds Can Do It Call 845-0569 The Battalion The Battalion Joshua Hobson, Editor in Chief Elizabeth Webb, Managing Editor Brian Cain, News Editor Julie Bone, Aggielife Editor Jordan Meserole, Sports Editor George Deutsch, Opinion Editor Lauren Rouse, Copy Chief Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Editor JP Beato 111, Photo Editor Kendra Kingsley, Radio Producer Yen Hai Cao, Webmaster THE BATTALION (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday dur ing the 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. News offices are in 014 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: news@thebattalion.net; Web site: http://www.thebatt.com Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A phrt of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 25$. Mail sub scriptions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester, $17.50 for the summer or $10 a month. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express, call 845-2611. 2 Mi Tuesday, June 8, 2004 THE BATUi 1 OYZ by Will lie Graduation Continued from page 1 al-Qaida Continued from paw only surpassed by the University of Texas, which awarded 11,704 undergraduate degrees. “We are, of course, pleased to see that these figures validate our own long-held assessment that students who choose to attend Texas A&M not only receive an outstanding education but also have a bet ter chance of graduating from A&M than from any public universi ty in the state,” said University President Robert M. Gates. “We attribute that high degree of success to the caliber of students we attract and to the quality and dedication of our faculty and staff.” These numbers can be interpreted as a move in the right direction toward successful campus diversity, but numbers can be misleading. According to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board’s Data and Performance Report, only 2.4 percent of all students that attended A&M in 2001 were black, and 8.2 percent were Hispanic. “It’s a smaller population of minorities so they are more pres sured to perform and ,” said West ley Ashley, 2004 A&M graduate in Anthropology and minority student. “With student pop ulation diversity, it doesn’t guarantee diversity in the classroom.” Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies Alice Reinar/. said the statistics should be seen a bit differently because A&M is striving to increase representation of minority groups. This data suggests that students are successful in larger proportional numbers than other state universities, Reinarz said. “The graduation rates for underrepresented minority students show prospective minority students that they can be successful at Texas A&M University,” Reinarz said. “This is something about which we are very proud.” Sprague Continued from page 1 an exceptional feat, but in 1925?” Kalmus said. Williams said the music industry had been recording jazz, classical music and so- called hillbilly music for about 10 years when Sprague’s cow boy music caught the indus try’s attention. “When Sprague had this big monster hit with his song about a cowboy getting killed on a trail drive and not being able to see his mother, the dollar signs started ringing up,” he said. Sprague was born in Manvel, near Houston, in 1895. As a teenager, he learned cowboy songs from his uncles during cattle drives. Sprague entered A&M in 1913 but did not graduate until nine years later because he took time off to join the army during World War I. He also pitched for the Aggie baseball team. Williams said D.X. Bible, legendary A&M head football coach, hired Sprague as an ath letic trainer immediately after his graduation in 1922. While working for Bible, Sprague sang cowboy songs for his family and friends as a hobby. Acting on encouragement from his wife-to-be, he recorded 10 songs from the Talking machine Co. in 1925 and was soon recording “When the Work's All Done This Fall.” The album was recorded with two men who were also Aggies, Kalmus said. Sprague has two great- nephews who currently live in Bryan: Travis Bryan III, attorney, and Tim Bryan, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of First National Bank. Tim Bryan said he remem-' i bers Sprague playing his guitar and singing, but he mostly remembers him as a kind man. “He was a second father who taught me how to hunt and fish and water ski and go camping,” Bryan said. Williams said Sprague has not received the recognition he deserves because his career was short and overshadowed by later stars. “He lit the fuse and the explosion was so big that people forgot about him because people came along like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers,” he said. Williams never met Sprague, but he plays his music on his local radio show, “Swing-N R.F.D.,” which is on KAGC-AM 1510 Saturdays, from 2 to 5 p.m. Visitors can view the Sprague display at the Corps center from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. NEWS IN BRIEF Oil prices renewing demand for veterans ODESSA, Texas (AP) — The high price of oil is increasing exploration and well redevelopment in the Permian Basin, but a few factors are sup pressing the size of the apparent boom. A shortage of steel, workover rigs and experienced oilfield workers are limiting the industry's growth, said Texas Railroad Commission Chairman Victor Carrillo. “Some crew and rig availability may be a limiting factor,” Carrillo said. The lack of oilfield veterans has been a persistent problem, said Willie Taylor, executive director of the Permian Basin Workforce Development Board, the employment agency and job-training arm of the Texas Workforce Commission. Industry downturns in the 1980s and late 1990s drained the large pool of talented drillers, riggers, roustabouts and toolpushers, he said. Independent producer John Bell of Kermit estimates the oil industry nationwide has lost about 800,000 workers since the early 1980s. Another producer told Bell the 1998-’99 bust took about 60,000 oil- patch jobs, Bell said. Arabia and urge Amenc® take that into account ■ making their travelplJ The Internet slat® warns all Muslims to* “contact with the Atl and Western crusadersri nonbelievers in theAri peninsula.” Muslims should stay i from Americans I Westerners “in their tf compounds, movement:I means of transport- J shapes and forms.” The statement said the | ing aimed to spare bkxxl. “We act only top them, their religion, lw| life,” the statement said. Militants have steppej attacks on foreigners i Arabia in past weeks, recently in a shootingSJ that killed an Irish cT man and wounded a If Broadcasting Corp.repj On May 29, gua attacked a complex kJ oil workers in the easier* of Khobar, killing 22 pep most of them forei® During that assault—cM by al-Qaida — the grl- reportedly separated ap spared Muslims and f: and killed non-Muslims 1 Previous bombings t|| Qaida that killed Mp raised an outcry in Saudi against the terror network I The statement calle||; “all security pew® guards of crusader.® pounds and American® and all those that have* by America and itsallie'l 1 return to the right path.: i arate themselves fromrl- lievers, to become theitp mies and to fight hohgf against them by money.* and weapon.” “This enemy nttisl: fought,” the statement p “There is no other way w fight it and eradicate it I Scholarship Cont. from page 1 I Suel said. “This istheii time the Brackenril foundation has parte* with us in 20 years." | Brackenridge has I donated to other schl j in Texas to enhanceef cational opportunities and around San Antofl | Suel said. Scholarships fe been funded at 2 University of Texas* through some youth e cation programs atTri | University with focr minority education. “We feel these yoij people will come bad the community and be: j models and teachers he Thuss said. “We waul demonstrate to students:; they can go to college \ influence peoples lives. The two Brackenril | foundation scholars!: awarded will be ini amount of $2,000 peryi;; MSC OPAS 2004-2005 MAIN STAGE SEASON THE FOREIGNER HUBBARD STREET DANCE FIDDLER ON THE ROOF YO-YO MA & EMMANUEL AX sponsored by Wells Forgo GISELLE THE FULL MONTY PRAGUE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA MISS SAIGON sponsored by Scott & White Health Plan 42ND STREET AIDA It’s Not Too Late to SUBSCRIBE and get the best seats to the best shows! Register for OPAS tickets when registering for classes. Logon to www.MSCOPAS.org for more information! MSC OPAS enlighten j entertain | inspire SUBSCRIBE NOW! VISIT THE MSC BOX OFFICE! call 845-1234 or logon to www.MSCOPAS.org