Weather Today INSIDE Sports ... see Page 3 Opinion ... see Page 5 HIGH 10W Tomorrow 'sputeui hetherrl in the pre sold to J attleaii Court the bade; r 1953. Be Vspedas “rythinrl HIGH 104° tOW 76° 104 th YEAR • ISSUE 166 • 6 PAGES TEXAS ASM UHIVERSITY ■ COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS Tomorrow Aggielife: Orientation leaders prepare incoming freshmen for life at Texas A&M. WEDNESDAY • JULY 8 • 1998 ends in chase Border agents killed in gunbattle onder' By Rod Machen City Editor unfona- ■ A 26-y e ar-old male was arrested iathea on cam P us early yesterday morn- Ihowbi for multiple violations, includ- vedit s possession of crack cocaine. LdforirSCollege Station police pulled jvice Wi ov i er a car driven by Charles Ed- Church Brd Williams Sr. of Bryan near the hllowp intersection of Welborn Rd. and Joe 1 RoyRoc-H u tt Blvd. after he ran a red light, [ictoni After police stopped the car, Hlliams did not give the officers a Bver's license. The police then un successfully attempted to identify the passengers. When police attempted to arrest Williams, he fled across Welborn into main campus. During the chase he discarded his shoes and a small, white package. Officers apprehended Williams near All Faiths Chapel. The package was a plastic baggie that contained six rocks of suspected crack cocaine, weighing 1.4 grams. Once he was identified, offi cers determined Williams had outstanding warrants. He was arrested and charged with possession of a controlled sub stance, evading arrest, as well as the outstanding warrants. Sgt. Cannon Purdue of the Col lege Station Police Department said crack cocaine is not uncommon in College Station. "It is one of the main sources of narcotics that people get arrested for," Purdue said. Although College Station police do not patrol the campus, they do have the jurisdiction to make ar rests anywhere in the city. I MSC Great Issues will host a lecture, "Drawing the Line: Tlchnology and the Ethics of Cloning, " with three A&M ifaiultv members Thursday to discuss the cloning issues that continue to stir controversy around the world. I Japan joined the cloning bandwagon Sunday when ■ researchers announced they had produced the first twin calves by cloning somatic (non-reproductive) cells tak- el from an adult cow. ■ Researchers say their goal is superior animals, which yield superior by-products, such as beef and milk. Oth- [efs worry about the potential for abuses and unknown genetic dangers. Thirteen European countries have signed the first international ban on human cloning, al though they support cell cloning for research. I MSC Great Issues chair Carrie Garcia, a junior po litical science major, said she is more concerned aj?out cloning since the recent production of calves in Japan. 'The cloning seemed more controversial," Garcia said. "Their justification is better meat and milk pro- li na r* up for debate duction. I don't think that's a good reason to be cloning animals." Dr. James R. Wild, professor and head of the depart ment of biochemistry and biophysics and a genetics fac ulty member, spoke on cloning last summer at a similar MSC Great Issues lecture. Wild will be joined by Dr. Herman J. Saatkamp, professor and head of the Department of Humanities in Medicine at the Texas A&M University Health Sci ence Center, and Dr. Duane C. Kraemer, D.V.M., pro fessor and associate dean for research in the College of Veterinary Medicine. Garcia said MSC Great Issues decided to reignite the cloning discussion on campus because of technological advances in the field in the past year. "Last summer it was a big hit, especially with vet erinary and medical and graduate students," Garcia said, "but the program is for the whole student body." Garcia said the speakers will update students on cloning advances and ethical issues and also answer students' questions. "We will be briefed on the technology over the past year," she said, "and then we will try to assess what is eth ically wrong and what is ethically okay." Dr. Saatkamp said the topic is timely and relevant to every student. "1 don't know why students wouldn't be inter ested," he said. "From animal and human cloning to the Human Genome Project, it's all interesting." The Human Genome Project is an international or ganization of scientists, whose initiative is to map and sequence the human genome, the complete package of genetic material for a living thing. Dr. Saatkamp said he will discuss his support of animal cloning and also human cloning in certain circumstances. A reception will immediately follow the lecture in Koldus 110, where students will be able to interact with the panelists. Cadet pretrial hearings begin Jury prospects puestioned about lublicity’s effect I NEW BRAUNFELS, Texas |AP) — The judge the capital jnurder trial of former Air Force IVademy cadet David Graham pegan questioning potential ju- [Ors individually Tuesday morn ing about how publicity on the lase may have affected them. 1 Judge Don Leonard excused live who said they already had formed an opinion about the frase. At mid-morning yesterday, I leonard had questioned 12 of rcnlhe 30 people summoned for in terviews Tuesday morning. I "Some of you, or maybe Jnost of you, have heard about JY Piis case," Leonard told irospective jurors as they as- embled throughout the day Monday. "It is critically impor- ant that you set aside what you "nay have heard." Because of extensive news media coverage, particularly in North Texas, the judge moved Graham's trial from Fort Worth in Tarrant County to this town 30 miles northeast of San Antonio. Graham's ex-fiancee, Diane Zamora, who had been a Naval Academy cadet, was convicted of capital murder in February in Fort Worth and is serving a life sentence. Both Graham and Zamora Were charged with killing 16- year-old Adrianne Jones, a high school classmate with whom Graham allegedly had a brief ro mantic fling. Prosecutors allege Zamora became jealous and or dered Graham to kill the girl. Graham, 20, sat attentively and showed an occasional smile in court Monday. As he was intro duced to the jury pool, Graham, wearing a dark blue suit and sporting a short haircut, stood up straight and appeared confident beside his three lawyers. At the request of the victim's family, prosecutors did not seek the death penalty against Gra ham or Zamora. The other pos sible punishment for a capital murder conviction is life in prison. Any time there’s a case ... when the codefendant has been convicted on the front page of every newspa per in the country, it’d be folly not think it’s a difficult case.” — Dan Cogdell David Graham defense attorney "The real story here will be if David Graham gets off lighter than capital murder," prosecutor Mike Parrish said. Defense attorney Dan Cogdell, noting the judge's gag order, declined Monday to an swer questions from reporters about his defense strategy. He ac knowledged the trial will be a tough one for the defense. SAN BENITO, Texas (AP) — Two Border Patrol agents were shot to death and a sher iff's deputy was injured Tues day morning in a gunbattle with suspects who were flee ing from another shooting. The suspects took off again and were stopped later. Offi cers wounded one gunman and another fled and was bar ricading himself from author ities, officials said. The initial incident oc curred around 5:30 a.m. in Rio Hondo, a Harlingen suburb. Cameron County Sheriff's De partment officers chased the suspects' white pickup truck, but they lost sight of the vehi cle and called for help, San Benito police patrol Albert Aguirre said. Two Border Patrol agents from the McAllen Sector were the first to reach the truck and pull it over, Aguirre said, adding that a Cameron Coun ty deputy arrived soon after. An exchange of gunfire killed a female Border Patrol agent and a male colleague, agency spokesperson Letty Garza in McAllen said. The deputy was wounded and tak en to Valley Baptist hospital in Harlingen. Identities were not immediately available. A second pursuit ensued, ending about 10 miles south east in San Benito. "The only thing we have is N.M. 100 miles 100 km OKLA. ARK. TEXAS Austin Q MEXICO Rio Hondo Gulf of Mexico San Benito they were chased out of town, there was another confronta tion and the suspect was wounded," Aguirre said. The wounded suspect was taken to Valley Regional Med ical Center in Harlingen. The second suspect holed up in a residential area about 20 miles north of the U.S-Mexico border. Agents from the Border Pa trol, the Department of Public Safety, Cameron County and AP the Edinburg SWAT team were at the scene. The Edinburg unit has an armored vehicle. The last time a Border Pa trol agent was killed the line of duty in Texas was January 1996, when Jefferson Barr, 33, was shot near Eagle Pass, about 250 northwest from San Benito. Details of the initial shootou t were still sketchy, of ficers said. "Any time there's a case with a confession and a case when the co-defendant has been convicted on the front page of every news paper in the country, it'd be folly not to think it's a difficult case," Cogdell said. "How difficult? Time will tell." Cogdell said he hasn't decid ed if Graham will testify. "I wish he would," Parrish said of the possibility. "I think it would benefit the state." Perhaps the most damaging piece of evidence against Gra ham is a confession he spent two hours typing while detained in a military lockup in Colorado nine months after the Dec. 4, 1995, slaying. According to the statement, Zamora hid in the back of her parents' car while Graham, her high school sweetheart, drove Jones to an isolated lake. Then Zamora hit Jones in the head with a dumbbell weight and Graham allegedly shot Jones. The two weren't arrested un til the following September after they'd both left Texas to attend the military academies. On Monday, Judge Leonard asked nearly 200 potential jurors as a group whether they knew any of the figures in the case and whether they had criminal charges against them or other circumstances preventing jury service. A total of 20 were excused Monday, leaving 161 people in the pool. , The judge is questioning the jury pool himself through Thursday. The defense and prosecution attorneys will ques tion prospective jurors early next week. Shake it up r STEPHANIE CORLEY/The Battalion Bernadette Hinojosa, a junior environmental design major, makes a Snickers latte for a customer at a local coffeehouse Tuesday afternoon. News Briefs A&M engineers honored by NSF An unusual number of Texas A&M University engineering facul ty members have received recogni tion this year as some of the top young researchers in the country. Five Texas A&M engineering faculty members have been select ed to receive Faculty Early Career grants from the National Science Foundation this year. The NSF awarded $40 million in these grants nationally to help promising young scientists and engineers develop simultaneously their contributions to research and education. The 360 awardees nationally were selected from nearly 2,000 applicants. The honorees include Dr. Daniel Cox, civil engineering; Dr. Theresa Good, chemical engineering; Dr. Lawrence Rauchwerger and Dr. from staff and wire reports Frank Shipman, both in computer science; and Dr. Lihong Wang, in dustrial engineering. "We have never received this many in one year, and it is a tribute to the quality of the young faculty we have been able to attract and the fine job of mentoring that young faculty being done by our faculty and department heads," Dr. G.P. (Bud) Peterson, executive as sociate dean and associate vice chancellor for engineering, said. Saatkamp leaves medical school Herman J. Saatkamp Jr., pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Humanities in Medicine will soon take leave from Texas A&M University. A farewell reception in his honor will be held on July 1 7 at 3 p.m. in the lobby of the Joe H. Reynolds Medical Building. All members of the faculty and staff are invited to the re ception, sponsored by the Texas A&M University Health Science Center College of Medicine. Pass rates up for African-Americans Texas Assessment of Academic Skills pass rates for African-American students increased by approximately 80 percentage points between 1992 and 1997. Despite these gains, the 1997 pass rate of 55.7 percent for these students still trailed the pass rate of 84.9 percent for white students by a substantial margin. A first step in improving African- American test scores is to identify school districts that do a better job of educating African American students, researchers at Texas A&M University and the Uni versity of Texas-Pan American said.