tes. He said | ljr their cash, ® who resist e- v by torching'! Kche helicopte: ■NATO politic; ! Clinton, woiil i point in the J ( higher-flying J teen unable to it forces opera;. WEDNESDAY April 7, 1999 Volume 105 • Issue 122 • 12 Pages College Station, Texas 105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY aggielife • True confessions: men profess their love for the melodramatic in the form of soap operas. PAGE 4 today’s issue Toons 2 Opinion 11 Battalion Radio Find out about Bryan’s new concert series at 1:57p.m. on KAMU-FM 90.9. / sports • The sixth-ranked Texas A&M Baseball Team blasted the Sam Houston Bearkats 15-4. PAGE 7 .S. prepares for refugees Ibanians seek shelter from Kosovo, 20,000 to begin arriving in Cuba STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS thnic Albanians continued to seek refuge yesterday in various tent cities in efforts to relocate away from the conflict in Kosovo. Hn the past 13 days, more than 430,000 refugees have left Kosovo — 262,000 have feld to Albania, 120,000 to Mace donia, 36,700 to Montenegro, 7,900 to B«nia-Herzegovina and 6,000 to Tlirkey. |!Wrhe United States, Germany, Norway, France and Canada have agreed to grant temporary asylum to refugees. The Unit- edlStates will accept 20,000 people, and ^■many, Norway, Sweden and Canada accept 40,000, 9,000, 12,000 and 5,0 '0, respectively. ■Western nations flew 3,000 more Al banians from Macedonia to temporary homes in TUrkey yesterday. Tlirkey said it will accept 20,000 refugees. Tlirkey has had strong historical and religious ties to the ethnic Albanians. The first group arrived at Corlu, in western Tlirkey, and were taken to a tent city near the town of Kirklareli, close to the Bulgarian border. Preparations were made yesterday to transport 3,000 refugees to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where 51,000 Haitian refugees sought asylum in 1994. Out of fear that the ethnic Albanians will be dis placed from their homeland permanent ly if they choose not to return after the conflict is over, the Albanian government has agreed to shelter refugees currently fleeing to Macedonia. Many western nations are helping refugees. Greece and Italy are setting up tent cities for 100,000 refugees in Kukes, Albania, a northern border town. Many of the refugees have now been transported to Brazda, a tent city near Brace. Refugees caught on the Yugoslavian side of the Yugoslavia-Macedonia border were forced to return to Kosovo by Ser bian forces. It is thought that these refugees may be used as human shields to prevent NATO air strikes, according to a CNN report. A NATO spokesperson in Brussels, Belgium, said six other tent cities are be ing prepared by alliance troops who will also provide food, water, medical aid, beds and blankets. Tibetan art. •ItdCt IA itud follow :ard) 3R ;ari-: at ctlens.coifl 3\, O.Mf Dptometrist Suite tot 7/840 Irifi CARING CASAS/The Battalion Palden Tinley, a Tibetan monk from the Drepung Loseling Monestary in India, adds sand to the mandala painting in the MSC Visual Arts Gallery Tuesday. This particular painting represents longevity. It will be dismantled today at the closing ceremony, symbolizing the impermanence of life. SEE RELATED STORY ON PAGE 3. 3-l0t Group to research Wellborn rail line BY AMANDA SMITH The Battalion The railroad tracks that divide the main part of the Texas A&M campus from West Campus may be come the subject of re search, if the Bryan-Col- lege Station Municipal Planning Organization (BCSMPO) approves a res olution authorizing the staff to conduct a rail study. The BCSMPO will meet today at 10:30 a.m. in room 102 of the Brazos Center, located at 3232 Briarcrest Dr. Michael Parks, BCSM PO director, said the poli cy committee’s authoriza tion to engage in a working relationship with Texas Transportation Insti tute (TTI) and Union Pa cific Railroad could allow the BCSMPO to apply for matching grant dollars from the federal govern ment for further research on the railroad. The BCSMPO, consist ing of the cities of Bryan and College Station, Bra zos County and Texas A&M, began reviewing the current status of the Union Pacific Railroad line in February 1998. Union Pacific Railroad has committed $100,000 to the study. Currently, 24 trains a day travel along the tracks that parallel Wellborn Road. Trains traveling along the Union Pacific line average 20 mph, in comparison to some trains averaging 60 mph along rural routes. Eddy Handley, assistant vice president of Union Pacific Railroad, said at the BCSMPO meeting last month the Bryan-College Station community must brace itself for an increase in train traffic along the Wellborn Road line. Handley said Union Pa cific Railroad is consider ing building a second track through the commu nity, which would double Union Pacific Railroad's carrying capacity and train traffic through Bryan and College Station. In response to the in creased pedestrian, car and train traffic, the Texas A&M Board of Regents ap propriated $10 million for the design and selection of an architect/engineer de sign team for the pro posed Wellborn Road pedestrian passageway. The proposed crossing would run under the Well born Road/Union Pacific Railroad corridor connect ing main campus and West Campus. The proposed passage way would be integrated into the new West Cam pus parking garage and the new Kyle Field entry plaza. A&M students to ‘fight’ for charity in boxing bout BY ANDREA BROCKMAN The Battalion Texas A&M students and amateur boxers will duke it out for charity tonight at Kappa Sigma Fraternity’s third annual Fight Night ben efiting the American Parkin son’s Disease Association (APDA). Fight Night will be at Rodeo 2000 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., and there are ap proximately 15 bouts sched uled. The amateur boxing com petition is Kappa Sigma’s an nual spring philanthropy pro ject. Last year, the fraternity raised $4,500 for the Make a Wish Foundation. Regina Ragan, coordinator for the American Parkinson’s Disease Association’s Infor mation and Referral Center, said Fight Night will be the first charity event for the year-old Brazos Valley chap ter. She said the money raised .will assist local Parkinson’s patients and fund education al symposiums. Muhammed Ali, world champion boxer, recently be came one of the most visible spokespersons for APDA. Zac Restad, a Kappa Sig ma alum and an organizer of the event, said the majority of the bouts are between fra ternity and Corps of Cadets members. “The event usually draws a crowd because of the rival ry between the Corps and frats,” he said. Students participating in the event trained at the Bryan Boxing Club and Darryl’s Gym, two local gyms sup ported by the Brazos Valley Boxing Association. Ama teurs from the community who train at the gyms will also fight. Restad said amateur box ers from Houston and Huntsville will compete with the community boxers be cause they are typically more experienced than the stu dents. Restad not only helped or ganize the event, but he will also participate in the super heavy-weight division. “I’m really pumped about the competition, but I’m also a little nervous,” he said. “My nose was broken last week during practice.” Tickets are $10 at the door and $8 in advance at Rodeo 2000, Greek Boutique, Disc- Go-Round and the Rothers on Southgate and Harvey Road. ; : Gay Awareness Week to address prejudices BY BETH MILLER The Battalion Hate crimes and involvement in Greek ^ L lib 1 are among the issues to be discussed ■#'|| at Gay Awareness Week events the re- mainder of this week. I Brooks Bell, president of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Aggies (GLB- TA) and a senior computer science major. Said Gay Awareness Week, celebrated each spring, is similar to Coming Out Week each jail. He said Coming Out Week is a nation al event, and Gay Awareness Week is a ad ditional celebration at held annually at xas A&M. The week’s events include “Hate i Crimes,” a speech by licensed therapist iB^Bary Norman, Wednesday: “Gay and 707 Texa s ’' I r eek, ” a discussion Thursday inspired by s :[ the book Out on Fraternity Row, which fea- 82 ‘ r tures personal accounts of homosexual students involved in Greek organizations; |rid “ALLY Rally, March on TAMU,” Friday. “S jlips) epted “Hate Crimes,” sponsored by Gender Issues Education Services, will be at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder; “Gay and Greek,” spon sored by GLBTA, will be at 7 p.m. in the Governance Room in Koldus; and “ALLY Rally, March on TAMU,” sponsored by AL LIES, will begin at noon at Rudder Foun tain. Bell said GLBTA covers various topics affecting the gay community at the week- long celebrations, and this year, the orga nization chose to discuss gay students’ in volvement in Greek life. Bell said Delta Lambda Phi is the only national fraternity he is aware of that open ly accepts the gay community in member ship. Bell said in the 1980s the gay commu nity presented requests to the Texas A&M Board of Regents to be allowed to form a recognized on-campus organization. The board rejected the request, and the stu dents sued the Texas A&M University Sys tem. He said the case advanced to the U.S. Gay Awareness Week Events Wednesday: Gary Norman "Hate Crimes" at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder Thursday: "Gay and Greek" discussion at 7 p.m. in Gover nance Room in the Koldus Building Friday: "ALLY Rally, March on TAMU" at noon starting at Rudder Fountain Supreme Court who approved the propos al. He said the approval for the Greek com munity to found organizations on campus occurred as a direct result of the court de cision to allow homosexual organizations. “A lot of people don’t realize that the reason we have the Greek system at A&M is because of the gay people,” he said. Tools, fishing methods offer insight into andent sailors’ lives BY RACHEL HOLLAND The Battalion Navigating tools and fishing methods are characteristics that help to define the medieval North Atlantic sailors, a nautical archeologist said last night. Brad Lowen, a doctoral candidate at the University of Laval in Quebec, Canada, told an audience of 30 that the features of North Atlantic navigation indicate the region sailors traveled in. He said knowing the characteristics helps define more clear boundaries between the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean regions. “Nautical archeology can be used to show the mentality of the sailors and then define the boundaries of their space,” he said. Lowen said lead sounding tools and compasses are used to navigate the envi ronment of the North Atlantic. He said the fog, the tides and the continental shelf of the region made these tools necessary. He said lead-sounding tools indicated depth and soil type, which, in turn, indi cated the location. “The lead tools measured the depth of water and also had a plug of wax used to sample the soil of the ocean floor,” he said. “In this topsy turvy world where lead tools indicated geographic location, time was conquered with a compass.” Lowen said the most precise use of the compass was to tell lunar time, the position of the moon at high tide. Another characteristic that defined the North Atlantic sailors, Lowen said, is the fishing society that dominated the region. He said the North Atlantic sailors changed from a traditional system where the captain and the crew shared the profits, to a more modern system. “Merchants, called hosts, would spon sor the the captain and the crew,” he said. “The outfitter, the captain and the crew would share the profits in this three-part arrangement unique to the North Atlantic.” Lowen’s lecture was the second in a se ries designed by the Nautical Archeology Program to evaluate potential faculty mem bers.