19c Texas A&M University ■ J 85 Today Tomorrow See extended forecast, Page 2. iume 103 • Issue 145 • 6 Pages College Station, TX ^ M s H I Tuesday, June 10, 1997 Briefs 1SWI cal “music man” Chris steers local bands ivard success. See Page 3. LIFESTYLES OPINION demists and their actions fee more harm than good American society. See Page 5. ONLINE 'ttpc/Zbat-web. tamii.edu 5 ok for Ipafl ani ^itional T 1 '! call on le Batt’s ^ Page. ^■,^4 RHA proposes park for green space aduate student to cept grant, award ic 9 largaret Hammer, a Ph.D candi- | iineducation at Texas A&M Uni- < ity,will travel to Washington, D.C. iyto receive recognition as the is'recipient of the Presidential J rdfor Excellence in Mathematics [Wscience Teaching. |1 Jammer received the award, which j lannounced March 25, for her work IrkerIntermediate School in Aldine w®Ttie $7,500 grant Hammer re- icipledwiththe award will be used to es- hejisli a wildlife habitat at Parker. riidents to receive femational award terltiffidesign students will be pre- oiciadwith the first International Ac- n ef.sand Service Award today at 10 in the Gallery of the Langford Ar- Jition cture Center, Building A. eawardees received the honor for |iou®ninga possible resort to be con- omfdedinSasaga, Egypt, a well-known yew area near the Red Sea. A total nioiij;;second-and third-year design stu- itsparticipated in the project. iHietwo students, Robert McKay, (aiiorenvironmental design major, tDerekDemere, a senior environ- uta! design major, whose design chosen by the joint venture Ital- development company travel to Egypt this July to present ifdesign ideas. The three stu- ..Adam Baldwin, a senior envi- e 4nental design major, Scott start inhard, a senior environmental | s town major, and Kim Kowalik, a se- eun? [environmental design major, who dtopiiedthe runner-up project also tofltravelto Egypt in December to |cit fcttheir plans for the resort. Steward, presented by the Col- plfehitecture, will be given an- inis-pioone student or activity judged P r §Seffective in promoting interna- cr wlservice and awareness, one- pirit' campaign ises $110 million 1995-1996 "Capture the if campaign earned over $100 in private donations for University. Die$110 million of private support edbyA&M ranked 11th in an an- ilsurvey of private support at pub- get iwersities by the Council for Aid to ration and other organizations. I “it In the past six years, the cam- Jehas raised over $600 million in and pledges to the University, lie money comes from private stothe University, the Texas A&M of sedation, the Association of For- bve|'Students, the 12th Man Foun- onand private research grants. I&M alumnus L. Lowry Mays of eAntonio donated $15 million, of the largest single gifts in il history, his- The Board of Regents will make the final decision %■■■■ 3H HR . ■ Lv!/ Photograph: Tim Moog The Residence Housing Administration is drawing up a final proposal to develop the green space where Law and Puryear halls used to stand into a park with a walk-through fountain, benches, picnic tables and barbecue pits. By Michelle Newman The Battalion The lot across from the A.R Beutel Health Cen ter where Law and Puryear residence halls used to stand may have a new destiny—as a park. The Residence Housing Administration is drawing up a final proposal to develop the green space into a park with a walk-through fountain, benches, picnic tables and barbecue pits. Responsibility for funding has not been dele gated yet, but the Department of Residence Life is expected to shoulder the costs of development. As of now, the Residence Life office is asking only for plans for the lot, not budget proposals. Eric Williams, a senior biomedical major and RHA president, said students should have a say in the utilization of the land. “RHA is the student voice to Residence Life,” Williams said. “Being that the department owns the property, it was a way for the students to voice what they wanted done.” The initial idea was to erect a memorial to Law and Puryear, which would have cost over $50,000. Students voiced their opinions and ideas through surveys and a general assembly held last spring. Ideas included fountains, benches, a playground, a miniature amphitheater, a terrace and leaving the lot empty. A Recreation Parks and Sciences class studying park design took on the lot design as a class project this spring. The class conduct ed its own survey of 120 students, both on- and off-campus. The survey showed that a majority of stu dents wanted some development on the land. Developments such as basketball and volley ball courts were not favored, according to the survey. Five class groups turned in plans of how to develop the Law-Puryear lot in re sponse to the survey results. The class tried to incorporate a unique fea ture to draw students to the area. Please see Park on Page 6. Cloning Controversy A&M genetics researchers comment on the issue of human replication By Joey Jeanette Schlueter The Battalion Controversy over human cloning may soon swell if President Clinton signs a bill that would allow experimentation with human cloning but forbid the actual repli cation of a human. A federal advisory panel said the partial- cloning bill could lead to valuable research improving mankind. The panel recom mended researchers be allowed to clone hu man cells but not be allowed to implant them in a mother’s womb. All embryos would have to be killed after experimentation. Mark Westhusin, an assistant professor of See related story. Page 2 veterinary medicine at Texas A&M Universi ty, has worked on embiyo transfer experi mentation at A&M for the past eight years. “I think no one wants to see humans cloned,” Westhusin said. “What I am concerned about is the shutting down and inhibiting of research that involve good things.” Westhusin added that cloning re search on human tissue growth and can cer cells could lead to cures for diseases that affect society. “If this piece of magic happens, a cure for cancer could be found,” he said. Brain tissue that does not heal, non growing cells or paralyzed cells could be replaced with healthy cloned cells, West husin said, but even in this process prob lems could arise. The research approved in the bill would be funded mostly with federal money. Cloning became realistic with the suc cessful cloning of the Scottish sheep Dolly last spring by scientists. The experiment was aimed at improving the quality of live stock in Scotland and the agricultural in dustry as a whole. With Dolly’s birth came the possibility of cloning humans. If Clinton signs the cloning bill, the federal government will be able to regulate science experiments dealing with human cloning. The Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine Ultimate Genetics Lab has been working cloning livestock as well. However, no progress has been or is intended to be made toward the cloning of humans, said Dr. Duane C. Kraemer, associate dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. One concern government must address when considering the partial-cloning pro posal is the private sector’s role. Westhusin noted that a company in Canada named Clonaid says it will attempt to clone a human for a price of about $200,000. The Wisconsin State Journal documented the company as saying noth ing is 100-percent sure. Westhusin, who is cloning pig and cat tle embryos, said Texas A&M’s cloning process differs from the process used to create Dolly. Please see Cloning on Page 6. p'-. ■ rM Photograph: Tim Moog Angie Baxter, a senior biomedical science major, is collecting bovine eggs to incubate for 24 hours before fertilization. A&M researchers will continue to focus on animal, not hu man, genetic advances. New Student Conferences give freshmen glimpse of college life By Jenara Kocks The Battalion The confident smiles of stu dent orientation leaders and exec utive committee members of the Aggie Orientation Leader Program (AOLD) greeted the excited and scared faces of incoming fresh men in the Commons Lobby Monday afternoon. Monday marked the first day of programs for the New Student Con ferences for the Fall 1997 semester. This session is one of 12 three-day New Student Conferences offered to freshmen this summer. Three conferences will be offered to trans fer students this summer. Four hundred and fifty to 500 students attend each conference. Leslie Lueckemeyer of Corpus Christi, Texas, a freshman at this conference, said she hopes the ex perience will help her adjust to at tending Texas A&M. “I hope to learn to feel more comfortable,” Lueckemeyer said. “I’ll have my class schedule and Photograph: Tim Moog Robert Needham, a senior environmental design major, and Kelly McMillan, a sophomore agribusiness major, lead a campus tour as part of the New Student Conferences. will start feeling more comfortable with what I’m doing, so it will be come a routine to me.” April Peterson, an incoming freshman from San Antonio, said she hopes the conference gives her a preview of life at A&M. “I want to get a feel of what it’s going to be like so I won’t be com ing into it blindly,” Peterson said. Please see Freshmen on Page 6. Witnesses tell of changes in McVeigh’s character DENVER (AP) — Timothy McVeigh blushed, smiled and even laughed Monday as penalty-phase witnesses chronicled his life, from a happy-go- lucky teen-ager and model soldier to a disillusioned veteran fixated on the dis aster at Waco. “I’m tom, confused,” McVeigh’s long time neighbor Richard Drzyzga said in a choked voice. “There is a part of me that still remembers him from a little kid. And then there’s a part that sees what every body else sees on TV and gets angry. And I can’t put the two together.” Drzyzga, who lived four doors down from the McVeigh family in Pendleton, N.Y., recalled that after McVeigh served in the Gulf War he disappeared for about a year, and then one day in 1993 sent him a videotape critical of the FBI’s deadly raid on the Branch Davidian com pound near Waco. McVeigh “It scared me,” he said. “It scared me to the point that I turned to my wife and said, ‘What the hell has he gotten into?”’ McVeigh’s attorneys sought to spare him the death penalty by showing ju rors the human side of the convicted Oklahoma City bomber. They began with a parade of Persian Gulf comrades to tell how he was a compassionate “soldier’s soldier" with a top-gun aim and a bright future. “He was it, the man, the top dog of the company,” said Bruce Williams, who served in a cramped Bradley fighting ve hicle with McVeigh during the 1991 war against Iraq. “I just assumed he would go and do great things.” McVeigh, who showed no emotion during last week’s prosecution testimo ny about the horrors of the bombing, appeared more animated that at any time in the trial, swelling with pride and often smiling as his old buddies sang his praises. Later, he dropped his head and placed his hands over his mouth when a neighbor told how he went off to war with the tearful prediction: “I'm coming home in a body bag.” Please see McVeigh on Page 2.