Texas A & M University Ht 9% TODAY ”7 H )4F H YEAR • ISSUE 79 • 10 PACES COLLEGE STATION • TX THURSDAY • JANUARY 29 • 1998 Isweifir I uni\ i / ivinv-JL.*? iwi ^ i/\ •✓✓vr Vew committee set to carry A&M into future ai$ jivorlL By Amanda Smith Staff writer N lx The eyes of Texas A&M focus on the future v taints to become one of the top 10 univer- J : in 3s in the United States by the year 2020. wp n® Vision 2020Working Committee, led |nteti DrjWalter Wendler of Texas A&M, pre sses toward developing a plan to im- b ivelthe oldest public institution in the • n te of Texas. lach Wei idler, the executive assistant to Presi- I- it Dr. Ray Bowen, said the Vision 2020 i io: rking Committee consists of faculty rep- iii sntatives, administrators, former students pe L1 the ■ current student body president. “As we (the committee) look at how Texas M Vvill collaborate (in the future), we can k at goals for the future,” Wendler said, xas A&M is clearly one of the best univer- es ui the state. We keep getting better and Drov ing the quality of education.” Wendler said that the committee looks t variety of rankings to compare A&M to ivefsities across the nation, lemostcurrent (1997) USNews&World Don data listed us as nineteenth among Dlic universities in the nation,” Wendler d. ‘[That is one kind of ranking. We also k at other reports. With the National Ke rch Council (NRC) rankings, the rank is : as clear.” The NRC lists only the top 25 universities in the nation. Texas A&M was not on the latest NRC report, Wendler said. “We are looking at what the top 10 uni versities from the NRC and the US News & World Report rankings have,” Wendler said. “Two of the things that come up when you talk about great universities is that they almost always have a fine arts school and a law school.” On Jan. 23, Texas A&M President Ray Bowen signed an affilia tion agreement with the South Texas College of Law, the first law school to have an affiliation with Texas A&M Uni versity. Paul Henry, the associate director of the Memorial Student Center and the faculty advisor of the MSC MBA/ LAW committee, said that the affiliation agree ment with the Soutli Texas College of Law is of great benefit to both institutions. “We need a law school to become a top 10 university,” Henry said. “Pretty much the only piece of the puzzle that was missing was a law school.” Henry said that the affiliation with a law school complements A&M’s current gradu ate and professional programs. Texas A&M has a medical school, an affiliation with the Baylor College of Dentistry, the Bush School of Public Administration and a masters pro gram for business students. Curtis Childers, student body president and a member of the Vision 2020 Working Committee, said that affiliation with the law school moves Texas A&M one step closer to becoming a top 10 university. “We want to set the stage for Texas A&M to achieve top national status,” Childers said. “Almost all top 10 institutions have a fine arts program and a law school.” Childers said that the committee hopes to increase population diversity among stu dents and faculty, develop a fine arts pro gram and retain a strong faculty.” Improving the percentage of graduate students and upgrading the faculty of Texas A&M are central to improvement, Graduate Student Council (GSC) President Clifton Griffin said. Griffin, a member of the Vision JPPT" 2020 Working Committee and a f doctoral candidate in the Wildlife and Fisheries de partment, said that top universities have a larger percentage of graduate stu dents than Texas A&M. Cur rently, Griffin said that graduate students make up only 18 percent of the student population. “We want to improve graduate education but not at the expense of undergraduate education,” Griffin said. “We need to make a renewed commit ment to graduate students and to promote a sound faculty with top research-minded individuals. That is going to take some lead ership at the top.” Dr. Howard Kaplan, a member of the Vi sion 2020 Working Committee and a distin guished professor of sociology, said that im provements in faculty and graduate programs will also take money. “What will drive these improvements is stable funding whether from state or pri vate sources,” Kaplan said. “We must con tinue to increase the amount of money from private sources, national research agencies and state allotments.” A plan designed for the more immediate fu ture, 1998 to 2002, establishes goals for Texas A&M University that resemble short er term goals of the 2020 vision plan. Wendler said that the shorter strategic plan provides a stepping stone for A&M as it progresses towards 2020. “Most of the objectives in the shorter fo cus plan are things that need to be accom plished to get to the 2020 project,” Wendler said. “When you get up near the top of the universities in the nation, it gets harder. That is the challenge to make us better than we already are.” Major goals of the short-term strategic plan aim to: -Strengthen colleges through improved faculty and student body across the Texas A&M campus. -Increase campus computing invest ment from $50 to $60 million per year. -Increase investment in library materi als, both print and electronic, to make the library system one of the top 35 university systems in the nation. Please see Future on Page 6. Dinner time tmoi htlrl W: ■M, T, &( irlst Hoe Whe |-Riv 1™: RYAN ROGERS/The Battalion |TiWShelly Novotny, a sophomore biomedical science major, feeds Emma and Frog, a pair of whitetail deer, at the Wildlife and Exotic Animal Building ^Wednesday afternoon as part of her veterinary physiology and pharmocology class. Kyle expansion awaits finish of cost discussion By Stacey Becks Staff writer The proposed expansion of Kyle Field is still uncertain as Texas A&M University officials attempt to low er Bartlett Cocke Inc.’s originafbid for the project to meet the school’s $33 million budget. Tim Donathen, assistant vice chancellor of Facilities, Planning and Construction, said he does not know how long it will take for the negotiations to be conclude so that construction can begin. “We would hope within two to three weeks we’ll know whether we will be able to recommend to the Board a contract award or whether we’ll be required to move to a sec ond team,” he said. “We could be repeating the ne gotiations until we get a contract that meets the budget.” Last Friday, The A&M Board of Regents gave a team of individuals from the University permission to negotiate with Bartlett Cocke, Inc. of San Antonio, Texas for the ex pansion of Kyle Field. Wally Groff, athletic director, said the plans are to tear down the horseshoe and add two decks with two levels of seats in between. “The overall project is to demolish the north end zone of Kyle Field and add a lower and upper deck,” he said. “We’re moving it 58 feet closer to the field and taking horrible seats and providing a good view.” The expansion will almost dou ble the amount of seats available in the end zone and add higher priced seats in between. Groff said the seats between the two decks will include a club area with 1,800 covered seats. People who pur chase the season tickets, for $2,000 each, will be Zone Club members. Alcohol will be served in the Zone Club, but will not be allowed outside the area. There will also be food buffets before the games and snacks served during the games for members. The next level will have 20 suites with 12 seats each that will sell for $27,000 per season. The club area will include a 14,000 square foot private club sep arated by glass from the seats. Shay Scruggs, chief develop ment officer for the 12th Man Foun- dation, said the Zone Club will in clude many amenities. “Amenities inside the club will in clude television monitors, elevators, possibly an escalator, food, drink and ample restrooms,” he said. Please see Expansion on Page 6. agffielife ' = i lift ■ ipOiW'ib: In ’Da House: Many uses of patios, balconies often overlooked by students. See Page 3 Aggies assist in new hearing-aid project d ;as A&M Men’s Basketball ,1m squanders 20-point d, falls 68-67 to Colorado, on's*’ See Page 10 lumacher: Tobacco industry i to blame for health troubles smokers. See Page 9 e»iK' e tp / /battalion.tamu.edu ok up with state and sS- a! tional news through The re, AP’s 24-hour online J0/VS service. By Susan E. Atchison Staff writer By developing a wireless volume control and a noise reduction sys tem, electrical engineers at Texas A&M University are making life easi er for people who use hearing aids. Graduate student Alexander H. Reyes and professor Edgar Sanchez-Sinencio are working with researchers at the University of Extremadura, Spain, and the University of Pavia, Italy to im prove hearing aid technology. The wireless volume control al lows users to adjust the volume without removing the hearing aid. The remote control, small enough to fit in a purse or a pocket, may be programmed to contain four or five different volume settings for different environments. “Hearing-impaired persons each respond differently according to degree of hearing loss,” Sanchez-Sinencio said. “If we take an audiogram, which is like a fin gerprint of a person’s hearing re sponse, we can see just where the patient’s frequency gaps are.” With this new technology, users would visit an audiologist to receive their prescription for a hearing aid, Reyes said. The audiologist would record the user’s audiogram and then program the hearing aid accordingly. Programs are developed not only to fit the patient’s individual hearing pattern but also to fit en vironments, such as restaurants or offices, Reyes said. The noise reduction system in creases the volume of human speech while cutting out background noise. Unlike volume controls used in the past, which made all sounds louder, the system is able to block out un wanted sounds. While the noise reduction system has direct application in hearing aids, it could have a broader application in reducing noise in cars, airplanes or factories, Reyes said. The new technology has been developed for hearing aids worn both behind the ear and inside the ear, Reyes said. Partial funding for the project is provided by Iberdrola, which is Spain’s major utility company. Advising for the project comes from audiologists at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. Agents’ testimony sought Prosecutors look to Secret Service for possible evidence of affair WASHINGTON (AP) —Aggres sively pressing for evidence of an alleged presidential affair and cov er-up, prosecutors on Wednesday sought Secret Service agents’ tes timony, questioned President Clinton’s former chief of staff and tried to clinch a deal for Monica Lewinsky’s cooperation. In a whirlwind day, investiga tors crossed the country to pick up possible evidence in a safety de posit box in Oregon while opening negotiations deep inside the Trea sury Department. Officials told The Associated Press Whitewater prosecutor Ken neth Starr’s office and Treasury of ficials were discussing how to gain testimony from Secret Service agents about whether they saw anything while protecting Clinton that would support allegations that he had an affair with Lewinsky. The two sides were trying to work through Treasury concerns that forcing agents to breach their customary code of silence might jeopardize the effective ness of his security detail, the of ficials said, speaking on condi tion of anonymity. Former chief of staff Leon Panetta spent most of the day at the federal courthouse and said he had been “largely detailing the operations of the White House and the physical setting of the White House.” He said he was unaware of “any improper relationship, sexual or otherwise,” involving Clinton, and he added, “My fervent prayer is that for the sake of the president and the sake of this nation that this matter is resolved soon.” With Clinton keeping mum about the crisis, an anxious White House awaited word of whether prosecutors would provide Lewin sky immunity in exchange for her testimony before a grand jury. Attorney William Ginsburg, who represents the former intern, said prosecutors have been in regular contact as they try to clarify various points in his client’s formal offer earlier this week to testify. “There is regular give and take,’’Ginsburg said in an inter view with the AP. “We are clarify ing points (in the offer) as they come up. And they have kept us pretty much in the loop. There’s an open line of communication.” Asked if he was growing more hopeful, Ginsburg said: “In nego tiations, it is not a matter of opti mism, it is a matter of patience.” Lewin sky swore in an affidavit earlier this month in the Paula Jones sexual harassment Clinton case she did not have an affair with Clinton. But prosecutors have custody of secretly recorded conversations in which Ms. Lewinsky tells a friend she did have an affair and was asked by Clinton and presidential friend Vernon Jordan to deny it. Among the charges prosecu tors must weigh is whether Lewinsky and the president committed perjury and whether she, Clinton and Jordan con spired to suborn perjury and ob struct the investigation. innmMn¥ilwwirglffiilTBIllilBBllinPiBlinilMIHIIIMyiWBMllWiWWIlliWlllBPIiiWBlMll | iiinilliiiMiiii | iiwiililMUHIilM iilillllliuwiiiiwMiW»nwBnnnMrmMi—rewiwniiiMiiii mwimu i