A2322 v *105:no.14X 11 MONDAY 105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY June 21, 1999 Volume 105 • Issue 155 • 6 Pages College Station, Texas opinion • Credit-card regulation offers debatable solution to dangers of student debt. PAGES State today’s issue sports Battalion Radio Tune in to 90.9 KAMU-FM at 1:57 p.m. for more details on the MSC Film Society’s screening of Cool Hand Luke. • A&M junior pitchers Casey Possum and Chance Caple look to the future. PAGES ite proposed for landfill BY SUZANNE BRABECK The Battalion razos Valley’s community offi- fi^ls and citizens have been work- ■ together for the past five years to iwelop a new landfill for the area because the Rock Prairie Landfill J serving Bryan, College Station and pr Brazos County will fill to capacity in the next five to six years. ■Officials said it would not be ^^*t-efficient to drive to the next closest landfill in Austin and they it would be inconvenient. The Brazos Valley Solid Waste Manage- mlnt Agency [BVSWMA) estab- a Citizens Advisory Commit tee (CAC) to ensure both citizens and officials agreed on the site of the saw new landfill. ana JThe CAC is comprised of com- X)!0 r "' munity representatives, including environmental groups, business representatives, concerned citizens, geologists and educators. The main duties of the CAC are to understand issues related to landfill site selec tions and potential impacts, to eval uate areas for potential landfill de velopment and to select acceptable search areas, to identify and evalu ate specific sites for consideration and to recommend to the BVSWMA Board a specific site for develop ment. Michael Carleton, an engineer for HDR Engineering, Inc., which also helped in the development of the Rock Prairie landfill, said many un desirable criteria for the location of the landfill have been defined by federal, state and local regulations. Carleton said a site in the south ern portion of Brazos County near the junction of State Highway 6 and FM 159 is under negotiation with the owners. He said a benefit of the site is the fact it has few land owners which have control of the desired 626 acres. “The proposed facility will not be just a landfill,” Carleton said. “The preliminary design for the facility will include options for recycling and composting, with two signifi cant buffer areas between landfill activities and the property bound ary. ” The Peach Creek Development company, which owns the land, and BVSWMA have a ‘good neighbor’ agreement which is a joint plan en suring the safety and aesthetic val ue of the new landfill, which will en sure a peaceful coexistence among the citizens and the facility. “There will be landscaping of land adjacent to major roadways to screen the day to day operations of an active landfill and joint development of util ities and transportation improve ments in the area,’’Carleton said. One-half of the 626 acres making up the desired site for the landfill will be needed for disposal purpos es. CAC has proposed cooperative land uses of the remaining territory such as park areas and long-term green spaces for public use or agri culture. Ed Peel, chairman of the CAC, said in order to ensure the safety of the area, certain precautions have been planned. Questions can be ad dressed to: www.bvswma@cicol- lege_station.txus Completion timeline Property procurement: 3 to 6 months Permit proposition: 12 to 16 months Texas Natural Resource Conservation Committee Review: 6 to 9 months Public hearings: 3 to 12 months Construction: 12 to 15 months. Area safety precautions: Screening of waste for unacceptable materials Providing public access and controlling use Exercising local control over costs Restricting liquid-waste disposal Maintaining access roads and route to the site Maintaining the final cover Maintaining the site for a minimum 30-year post Providing a dependable, long-term solution for solid-waste disposal. Undesirable features in a potential site: • Airport zones • Floodplain areas/wetlands • Seismic impact zones • Recent geological faults - • Unstable geologic conditions • Endangered species • Significant historic archeological sites Community celebrates Juneteenth TERRY ROBERSON/The Battalion LEFT: Amadou Thiam of Senegal performs the “Dance of the Warrior” at Freedom 2000, a Juneteenth celebration at the Lincoln Center in College Station Friday. ABOVE: Senior speech communications major Eric Durham reads the poem “Born to Give Birth” Friday in the MSC Flagroom. BRADLEY ATCHISON/The Battalion Last Friday Texas A&M students and faculty members celebrated June teenth, the celebration of the announcement of the end of slavery in Texas. On June 19,1865, Union army general Gordon Granger landed in Galveston and told the slaves of the freeing of the slaves in East Texas. Juneteenth was celebrated in commemoration of the end of slavery for 115 years before Texas declared it an official state holiday in 1980. Today it is celebrated worldwide. Officials warn of e-mail virus BY STUART HUTSON The Battalion Computer experts said The Worm.Explore.zip computer virus has joined the ranks of the Melis sa and Chernobyl viruses causing damage to thousands of comput ers during the last two weeks. Randy Friemel, a programmer analyst for Texas A&M’s Computing and Information Services (CIS), said Worm.Ex plore.zip spreads between com puters through e-mail or file sharing (through a network or by disk) and then slowly de creases the amount of data a computer’s hard drive can store. Friemel said this causes prob lems while running programs and within functions such as printing. If these problems are not checked into, the end result may be the in ability to use Windows98 and Windows95 at all. According to a report from the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT), a federally funded research and development center at Carnegie Mellon University, the Worm.Explore.zip virus has al ready hit tens of thousands of computers at major companies such as General Electric and Mi crosoft. This virus could become as widespread as the Melissa virus which affected more than 100,000 individual computers. Friemel said one of the reasons for the recent increase in comput er viruses is because computers have become more user-friendly, allowing people with minimal computer experience to design and implement viruses. “Powerful and easy-to-use pro grams like visual BASIC make it so easy to write programs that you don’t have to be a computer sci ence major to be a hacker,” he said. He said another reason is the in creasing power of computers. Dr. Bart Childs, head of A&M’s computer science external relations department, said one of the major reasons for the increase is the wide spread use of Windows98 and Win- dows95 operating systems, which are the only operating system most of the current viruses affect. Childs said the speed at which new programs are developed and put out on the market leaves them with computer bugs, possibly leading to security risks. Friemel said he attributes the large number of Microsoft-specific viruses to the fact the Windows operating system has been in use for so long, virus programmers have learned to manipulate it. Friemel said he has encoun tered relatively few problems with viruses at A&M. At his past job as a programmer analyst for Univer sity of Texas at Austin he said he see Virus on Page 2. % NEWS IN BRIEF C^PAS, TROUPE J o hold auditions MSC Opera and Performing lan^rtl Society (OPAS) and the a tv : razos Valley TROUPE will efb'olci auditions from 6 to 9 (59' .m. today through Wednes- eig 1 ay for Broadway Cabaret, the .ant n h u a I community theater p-s ft review of the upcoming OPAS 'sda'.aason. tea ; Selections will be chosen om Broadway-style shows ■^o. jch as Annie, The King and I, .east id j|-, e Music of Andrew Lloyd 'ebber. it,5' Sarah Nash, program coor- BoZ‘ ; nator for OPAS, said in a oiid -ess release the organiza- , th e on!s are looking for a variety Sever- people for the upcoming :Ji. ?apon. “There is a variety of music in the show, and they will be looking for lots of good voices and other people to perform,” she said. Auditions are open to the pubic and will be held in TROUPE’S playhouse in Post Oak Mall. Performances of Broadway Cabaret will be July 20 and 21 at the College Station Confer ence Center. Tickets are avail able at the MSC Box Office. Ph.D. candidate receives award Ming-han Li, a Ph. D. student in the College of Architecture, has been chosen to receive First American Bank’s new scholarship for international students. For his final master’s de gree project Li created a com puter generated master plan for revitalizing downtown Bryan. He provided his find ings to the city planning de partment. Harlow Landphair, a professor of landscape archi tecture, nominated Li for the scholarship. Landphair said in a press release Li’s project exempli fies the cooperative effort be tween the local communities and A&M. “To stimulate more com munity participation in the pro ject, [Li] conducted a work shop ... to present the project to city officials and local com munity leaders, which has been a tremendous help for our historic downtown Bryan,” he said. CS Utilities set to power annexes BY SUZANNE BRABECK The Battalion Areas annexed by the city of Col lege Station will have their utility providers switched to College Sta tion Utilities as the city unveils its new facility for its utility cus tomers. Kelly Chapman, public relations and marketing manager for the city of College Station, said today the city of College Station will begin providing electric service to all ar eas annexed by College Station since 1994. Two hundred accounts will be affected by this change. The new utility building will be located at 310 Krenek Tap Road. All utility customer services will be handled at the new building instead of city hall. The mailing address is P.O. Box 10320, College Station, TX 77842. Business hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The new facility will have the following services available for payment in addition to the standard procedures: personnel at the front counter, four drive-through lanes and a night deposit box for after hour transactions. Chapman said to ensure a smooth transition for the customers who will be affected by the change, BTU and College Station Utilities will work together simultaneously to remove BTU’s meters and install the College Station meters so that their service will not be interrupt ed. It is estimated it will take 12 weeks to complete the change. Unless legislation changes, resi dents in Texas will not have a choice for their utility service. Customers involved in the change will not have to open an ac count or place a security deposit. Account information will be trans ferred from BTU to College Station Utilities, which is publicly owned. “When College Station annexed the area, the cities of College Sta tion and Bryan had a long-standing contract that stated College Station Utilities would serve all electrical customers within College Station’s city limits,” Chapman said. “Since the time of the annexation, this contract has been in a legal process, which has now been finalized by the Public Commission of Texas.” JLL.O