CHIPS AHD SMALL DRINK WITH ANY SUB Tuesday, July 20, 2004 THE BATTAl 110 College Main fk«te vvh»en ordering One certifitate goo>d {*« petson, per viwt Not good wtth arty otfwn o?ter. Good at partiifparing toattoom onfy. Certiffcate %wd where proh^rted. Good only on the prcidorts. (rwhceted. Any other wue comhtndtn fraud, No c#»h vahre urrfew prohibrted by law, Iften <«4i value m 1/20 oJ a cent Otfe* mt good on Diasnond Mira Mrlti'*. ^ u € /)Of* r H/f/a/H' M Apartments 1 Bedroom $ 449 2 Bedroom $ 499 *Fitness Center ""Outside Storage ""Walk-In Closets ""Sparkling Pool ""Shuttle Route ""24 Hour Maintenance major, said that bettering A&M’s campus will be a recruitment tool for the Unfa “I think that itwasagood: on the MSC and the Unive,- part because (the Flag l looked so dated that it could students from wanting toi here,” Slocum said. “I meat the center of campus.” (979) 693-3701 1700 Southwest Parkway tJlone. PteGjtcutctp GettteM, • ' 'OF BRAZOS VALLEY YOU COULD HAVE AN STD AND NOT KNOW IT! IF YOU'RE SEXUALLY ACTIVE YOU ARE AT RISK - EVEN IF YOU ARE USING CONDOMS. STD Testing - Free & Confidential Call our Registered Nurse to make an appointment 695-9193 205 Brentwood, College Station t $£a r °>?- Free Rent Or Special Rates 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments, Internet Available Starting at $395 lincolnsquareapts.com 313 Lincoln, College Station LINCOLN SQUARE 693-2720 Why bother with parking when you can walk to TAMU? - New LOWER prices - Only 2 blocks from TAMU - Now preleasing for summer/fall Casa Del Sol 696-3455 aggie.inn@verizon.net Texas A&M Univers Church cy Dr St Srasney © Cross St Cti\a Del Sol ifflsasi - i'A • - - ■ - » eSta S^ 9792^.9000 WU#!liTil Marine says he did not desert post Chief • a-n r-v f I r-^ i t s' Continued from page': By Matthew Barakat THE ASSOCIATED PRESS QUANTICO, Va. — Cpl. Wassef AH Hassoun, the Marine who disappeared under mysterious circumstances while on duty in Iraq, insisted on Monday that he was captured by insurgents and that he is still a loyal Marine. “I did not desert my post,” he told reporters out side Quantico Marine Corps Base. “I was captured and held against my will by anti-coalition forces for 19 days. This was a very difficult and challeng ing time for me.” He did not answer any questions during his brief appearance. He was joined by his brother, who arrived from Utah. “I would like to tell all the Marines as well as all those others serving in Iraq to keep their heads up and spirits high. Once a Marine, always a Marine, Semper Fi,” Hassoun said, invoking the Marine Corps motto, Latin for “always faithful.” Marine spokesman Lt. Col. Dave Lapan said the Marine Corps was not in a position to confirm or refute Hassoun’s claim. Hassoun, 24, of West Jordan, Utah, disappeared June 20 from his base near the troubled Iraqi city of Fallujah and turned up unharmed at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut on July 8. It remains unclear how he traveled from Iraq to Lebanon, where he was bom and still has some relatives. On June 27, Arab television showed a video tape of a blindfolded Hassoun, a sword hanging over his head. At one point during his disappear ance, a group claiming to represent his captors announced that he had been beheaded after being lured from the base by a love affair. The military is investigating whether the report ed kidnapping was a hoax and whether the Muslim Hassoun deserted his unit. Hassoun is in the midst of what the Marines call a “repatriation process" in which he is debriefed and given time to decompress and avoid the media spotlight, officials said. Hassoun arrived at Quantico on Friday after six days of medical evaluation at a military hospital in Germany. In the coming days, he will leave Quantico for Camp Lejeune, N.C., his home base, Lapan said. He will continue the repatriation pro cess there, Lapan said. When in title only. __ "The president is very ml OpCn tO that Kntlrl .Hl 4 ^ ^ ^ ars latt ideas that the reforms that we're alrl implementing," McClellanl xa ^' ^ The commission repow " is expected to discuss anifl 11 '* tionship between Iraq sneM , , ,r , now has and traditional foe Irananir , • j • , have bee al-Qatda terror organization■ Rudder VP Continued from page 1 so students should have more convenient access to our office,” Bresciani said. Kathy DiSanto, an adminis trative assistant who helped plan the event, said being in a high- traffic area is important. “At the Office of the Vice President of Student Affairs, students are our main interest,” DiSanto said. “We have an open door policy and we want students to feel comfortable in our office.” The vice president for stu dent affairs serves as a senior administration officer of the University and oversees several departments focused on provid ing a high quality environment to students to promote success, Bresciani said. "Thisisthestudents’University; we’re here to serve students and we want them to know where we are and that they’re welcome here,” DiSanto said. Bresciani said he hopes fac ulty and staff will reference the new location in their interactions with students this summer. “We want students to be familiar with our location,” Bresciani said. “It's an incred ible improvement in terms of accessibility.” There may be a similar event held in the fall when more students are on campus, but nothing has been planned yet, Kelley said. “We want students to know where we’re located so that they can utilize services in student affairs,” Kelley said. hearing i said his > “Con Continued from page lx cream A tun Battle Monuments Conffi:l ;) ^j son and visitors to the site. I '‘£ vc Everett, the team’s geofl ^ sa cist, brings the ability m 5 lll j t | 1 underground. Gamesvi “We use metal deles! 0 | ie u ground penetrating radai!,^ | ie magnetics to find buried .T crete, iron and disturbed' Everett said. “We’re lookiii; underground fortification! I we would then build mapsi-j subsurface structures.” Everett said that unlike j lar research conducted at Ik:I of Custer’s last stand alii Big Horn, which changeej way historians have viewed J battle “this will give usadl picture of the battle, butthea shouldn't change too mud j Everett said there is pif] inary interest in doing si research at San Jacinto. “There are a lot of lintel down there,” Everett said.“Tl a lot of potential for consln the history of that particular!! Suicide Continued from page 1 he held driven from Saudi Arabia into Iraq. The fuel tanker attack on the police station in the Seidiyeh neighborhood of Baghdad took place just after 8 a.m., as police gathered to receive their daily assignments. “We were all standing in a row, listening to our officer as he gave us our assignment for the day,” said Mehdi Salah Abed Ali, 32, lying in a bed at al-Yarmuk hospital with his leg bandaged. The police station was fenced in, and the tanker exploded about 500 feet away in the middle of the neighborhood. The attack killed nine people and wounded at least 60, said Saad al-Amili, a Health Ministry official. The tanker’s presence in the industrial area did not raise concerns until it started speeding toward the police station, said Ahmed Nouri, who works at a nearby car wash. “I was standing with a friend when we saw the tanker speeding in an unnatural way,” Nouri said, describing the driver as a young man with a light beard. After the attack, protesters gathered and chanted, “Long live Saddam!” before police dispersed them by firing in the air. Militants have used near-constant car bombs, sabotage, assassinations nappings as weapons in their 15-moi insurgency. They increasingly have tars police and local officials to try to destat the interim Iraqi government and pc those it considers collaborators withtb forces who drove Saddam Hussein power last year. Monday’s attack was the fourthsinctl 14. At least 31 people have been killet On Sunday, two car bombs inTikril two police officers and wounded fiveol On Thursday, attackers detonated i bomb near police and government built in the western city of Haditha, kill® Iraqis and wounding about 40. c owds, I “Musi n e quite Smith die Wall, pirties. 1 oi Nortl 1 I Deli u word of I “I lev Smith sa I Smith I “I use paying a id Mati ho has Appar cording a good Fuller n a don rforme r shirt f< copy. Brian f Smith id not b Smith rP' Aggieland DepoS Campus Landmarks www.ai % Culpepper Plaza ' 695-1422 close to campus... far from ordinary. coming august 2004 www.warehouseapartments.com Billiards Rooms Heated Swimming Pool Championship Intramural Teams 1 Block from Campus in the historic Northgate district Surround-Sound movie theater 24-Hour Fitness Center On the edge of the Texas A&M campus and only minutes from Biinn College, The Tradition at Northgate is in the middle of student life in Aggieland and has everything you need in one unique community. The award-winning Residence Life staff, pool and fitness center, our very own on-site Edge Cafe, surround-sound movie theater and attached parking garage are just a lew of the things that make us Aggieland's finest housing facility. Corne Live The Tradition in Aggieland.. Where Great Memories & Friendships Last a Lifetime. 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