y/April 23,1951 cstore rom Page 1 i them,” Marot- il also is trying snts by coordi- the Sterling C. try to improve lity. the library we vn lists of the tly checked-out looks that are Spearowsaid. e bookstore can ooks accessible by at least hav- r sale that can't ie library, aid he ho r . ccomplish its.. of establishing f communication y, students and administrators, il’s minutes can the bookstore's and are pub- month in the me’s newsletter, PRIMED FOR UT The Baseball Team blows by UTSA. SPORTS, PAGE 9 Hayman: Four years at Aggieland teach lessons about A&M and about life. OPINION, PAGE 13 A&M students are working to save the Attwater prairie chickens. AGGIELIFE, PAGE 3 r ol. 102, No. 136 (14 pages) V The Battalion Serving Texas A&M University Since 1893 Wednesday • April 24, 1996 adioactive sparks fly in Russia KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Fire aced through deserted villages round the Chernobyl nuclear lant Tuesday, sending wind hipped radioactive particles kyward 10 years to the week fter the world’s worst nuclear ccident. Monitors flown in helicopters ver the area of the fire recorded nly a slight radiation increase, aid Nikolai Komshensky, a pokesman for Ukraine’s nuclear egulatory agency. "We see no reason to be con- amed now,” he said. Plant officials said the fire losed no danger to the Cher- lobyl plant, still in operation a decade after a reactor exploded, killing at least 30 people out right. Another 5 million people were exposed to radioactive fall out, mostly in Ukraine, Belarus and Russia. No injuries were reported in the fire, which burned several acres before being put out after about 7 1/2 hours. It was not clear how much damage was done to the villages, officially off limits since the plant disaster. Firefighters said the blaze was probably started by a ciga rette dropped by one of the fami lies visiting graves near the vil lage of Tovsty Lis, about six miles northwest of the plant. Victims’ pain not forgotten Michelle Lyons [he Battalion National Crime Victim Rights leek is being observed at Texas i&M and in Bryan-College Sta- ion with the dedication of a liv- ng memorial, a candlelight vigil and a children’s art contest. Bob Wiatt, University Police )epartment director, said the veek’s events are important be muse crime victims are often for- Amy Browning, Thf Battalion Sherry Hostetter and Sgt. Betty lemay, a UPD officer, tie a yel low ribbon around the memorial tree on West Campus. gotten. The criminal justice system fo cuses on catching the perpetrator, he said, which makes victims feel forgotten. “Victims should be acknowl edged,” Wiatt said. “We in the community and in the criminal justice system are aware of the hurt they have endured. ‘We want to make sure the vic tims know there are places out there in the community devoted to them and their welfare.” A red oak tree was planted on the A&M campus Tuesday in memory of crime victims. Sgt. Betty Lemay, University Police Department Crime Preven tion Unit, said the tree planted on West Campus will serve to honor anyone who lost their lives to vio lent crime, whether it be domestic abuse, random violence or a cal culated crime. Lemay said the memorial serves as a reminder that victims are real people. Beginning at 6:30 p.m. Thurs day, a candlelight vigil will be held at Wolf Pen Creek Am phitheater. Balloons inscribed with the See Victims, Page 8 Old women sobbed and tried to shield grandchildren from the smoke as flames engulfed homes they were forced to abandon to radioactive contamination from the April 26, 1986, disaster. The fire spread quickly through five villages in the 18- mile exclusion zone around the plant, carried by strong winds blowing toward Kiev and its 2.6 million residents. It burned pines and buildings in one of the areas most heavily contaminated with radioactive cesium. The West has long pushed for Ukraine to close Chernobyl, but the energy-starved former Soviet republic says it needs the electric ity and jobs the plant provides. Dr. Fred Mettler, a University of New Mexico professor who led a 1990 study into the health haz ards of the Chernobyl disaster, said the risks from radiation were minimal. The cesium contamination from the 1986 accident mostly is in the soil, and not likely to be carried by smoke from burn ing buildings, Mettler said by telephone. “I would be surprised if any body would get enough of a lung ful to significantly change their normal cancer risk,” he said. The environmental group Greenpeace, however, said fires can carry radioactive material to previously uncontaminated areas. “This is clearly a danger to the health of people, and not only in Ukraine,” spokesman Antony Frogatt said in Kiev. Firefighters from Chernobyl’s fire station rushed to the cluster of villages after the fire broke out at noon. Small forest fires are not un common in the exclusion zone around the plant. But Vasily Melnik, chief of the Kiev region al fire service, called Tuesday’s blaze the “most significant” since the 1986 accident. The Group of Seven industrial ized nations has pledged $3.1 bil lion to help close the plant by 2000, but the Western democra cies set no date for delivering the aid at their summit last weekend despite an appeal from Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma. In Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, 19 activists from around the world were arrested Tuesday at a demonstration demanding the plant’s immediate closure. Twelve were released. Among the seven still in custody were an American and a Dutchman, police said. Only two of Chernobyl’s four reactors are in operation. The No. 4 reactor is encased in a concrete sarcophagus that some experts say has deteriorated badly. FUN IN THE SUN Travis Gulbis, a senior kinesiology major from Dublin, Ohio, digs a spike at the Student Rec Center Tuesday afternoon S Set 18 mg .)> .in.)- ; cash- Got a question? Physicists look for answers By Heather Pace The Battalion For millennia, man has searched for answers to the fundamental questions of life. Now, several Texas A&M physicists from the Center for Theoretical Physics are helping pave the way toward an all-en compassing theory that will aid man in his quest for answers. Dr. Michael Duff, an A&M physics professor, said a the ory that the building blocks of the universe change from points to bubbles, sheets, and tubes is attracting the atten tion and respect of the scien tific community. The mathematical equations that describe this process could become part of a “theory of everything.” “Theoretical physicists are so excited because the ultimate theory that would explain all of these ancient questions is with in our grasp,” Duff said. “... For many years, physicists have looked for a theory that would explain all physical phenome na, including the beginning of the universe.” Because theoretical physi cists seek to reduce complicated phenomena to simple formulas, they are hoping to find one or perhaps several equations to explain the fundamentals of the universe. “The hope is that the theory of everything would explain all of this in a simple way,” he said. “We want to have just one equation that would fit on the front of a T-shirt.” The M Theory, one piece of the larger theory, says the fun damental objects of the uni verse are not dimensionless point-like objects as once be lieved, but membranes that take many forms. The idea is that membranes exist in 11 dimensions, not just the four that most people typi cally think of — length, width, height and time. A&M’s research has gained recognition as many physicists have begun accepting the theo ry of an 11-dimensional uni verse. “In the last year, many peo ple have come to believe there are 11 dimensions, which has vindicated our work here at A&M,” Duff said. “The reason we’re excited is we think we See Answers, Page 8 CS shaves utility bills through Oct. The average residential customer will save about $3 per month By Kendra S. Rasmussen The Battalion College Station utility cus tomers will soon share a $990,694.40 refund from the Texas Municipal Power Agency for fuel cost overpayment. Bob Pohl, College Station electric division manager, said that when the city’s contract with TMPA expired on Decem ber 31, 1995, actual costs were compared with estimated costs and reconciliation adjustments were made. “When the contract ended, they found that they had over collected about $990,000,” he said. “TMPA gave us an $800,000 (overpayment) esti mate and deducted it from our last bill. Then, as they did the final reconciliation, they deter mined the balance to still be about $190,000 and refunded that to us as well.” Pohl said the refund will be reflected on May through Octo ber utility bills. The average residential customer will save about $3 per month. “By the time it is all paid back, the average residential customer will have saved about $22,” he said. Bruce Albright, College Station utility office manager, said only current customers will receive the refund, and the amount will de pend on their electricity usage in 1996, not 1995, when the over payment occurred. Current customers will re ceive a refund regardless of whether they were customers during the overpayment period. Those who were College Station utility customers during the overpayment but are no longer will not receive refunds. “We tried to (locate previous customers) once before,” he said, “but chasing down power cus tomers is a serious problem. In a lot of cases it is unsuccessful.” Pohl said College Station’s contract with TMPA included a fixed rate for electricity and a power cost adjustment. The overpayment occurred in the power cost adjustment area. The purpose of power cost adjustment charges is to cover variations in gas and TMPA power plant prices. Pohl said the power cost ad justment charge is billed to Col lege Station customers. “Since that was a cost that we passed on to our customers, we figured that we should pass the refund back,” he said. Since January, the power cost adjustment charge to College Sta tion customers has been $0,003 per kilowatt hour. This charge will be reduced to $0 per kilowatt hour until the $990,694.40 has been folly refunded. Bomb set to explode inside human cells The experimental cure for cancer identifies cells by the protein produced WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists fight ing cancer have engineered what they call the first genetic time bomb, set to go off in side tumor cells when they blow their cover by producing telltale proteins. The approach is intended to deliver its killing force to cancer cells with pinpoint accuracy while sparing the normal healthy tissue around them. The idea is still in the test tube and probably years away from human use. It is notable for its novelty, but whether it will eventually lead to a cancer cure, as its de velopers hope, remains to be seen. Ordinary chemotherapy uses a scatter shot approach: Toxic medicines kill not only cancer cells but plenty of innocent by standers, too. Many scientists have been trying to identify landmarks that make tu mors unique, then tailor medicines that zero in on them. The gene bomb scans the innermost workings of the renegade cancer cells look ing for proteins that only they make. “As with any bomb, it has an explosive part and a trigger,” said Luis da Costa of Johns Hopkins University. “You can put this bomb into a cell, and if it is normal, nothing happens,” he said. ‘We en gineered the trigger so it can only be pulled by a cancer protein. This will make the bomb go off and kill the cancer cell.” Da Costa described the innovation Tuesday at the annual meeting of the American Associ ation for Cancer Research. A report is also be ing published next week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. While researchers have talked excitedly for years about using gene therapy to cure cancer and other ills, they are confounded by one serious drawback: How do you get the killer genes into the cells you want to eliminate? One strategy is to use viruses as Trojan horses to carry them in. But cancer cells seem especially hard to penetrate. In the clump of tumor cells, only a few may ab sorb the transplanted genes. Even if these die, the others survive and spread. It might even work for viral diseases, too, such as AIDS.