105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY WEDNESDAY August 4, 1999 Volume 105 • Issue 181 • 6 Pages College Station, Texas sports • Texas A&M football re cruits shine in the 1999 high- school All-Star Game. PAGE 3 i Dark Fanfe he Dark Ftiiti Up Records mig trees n, because fonkj Mark Pickerel:: | on a newprojei nim, The Dart: y soup of soira esick Pip. ; dramatically f' athers, Pickerel rts in TmNoC cted ByTheirP ,vo fast-pacedt die dark lyrics' isistentfytfiHK and leave era or aching forai today’s issue News 6 Battalion Radio Listen to 90.9 KAMU-FM at 1:57 p.m. to hear how College Station has been recognized for its community relations efforts. opinion • A student profiling system would help prevent serious conflicts between roommates. PAGE 5 rofif seeks academic director BY CARRIE BENNETT The Battalion i With You" take softer single-t d is a perfect fit itheheatofar ■Texas A&M’s athletic director is currently looking for the "right person” to fill the position of associate athletic director for academic af fairs after a mutual agreement led to the resig nation of Dr. Karl Mooney, effective Aug. 31. ■Texas A&M athletic director Wally Groff said affcearch committee began looking through ap plications yesterday to fill the position. He said there is no deadline to find a replacement, and the position will be filled when he finds the most qualified person. ■ “The associate athletic director for academ- ilaffairs is responsible for supervising the staff of academic counselors,” he said. “As well as making sure athletes have declared a major and are on the right track toward graduation.” Last football season, D’Andre “Tiki” Harde man was found to be ineligible after he had played in two games. The mistake was attrib uted to a clerical error made by the registrar’s office and was not discovered by the athletic de partment before the season began. As a result of Hardeman’s ineligibility, A&M had to forfeit its Sept. 12 win (28-7) against Louisiana Tech. “This was not the primary factor which led to [Mooney’s resignation],” Groff said. Mooney, who worked in the athletic depart ment for 10 years, said he will continue to teach at A&M. “I’ve worked for two years in the Depart ment of Educational Curriculum and Instruc tion (EDCI) and I will now teach a combination of classes from EDCI and the department of Ed ucational Psychology, since the demand has suddenly increased,” Mooney said. He will work with high-school students who want to attend college and be involved in ath letics through his own company. Personalized Athletic Academic Counseling and Evaluation. “We’re working with high-school students and young people and their parents who are trying to get into colleges,” Mooney said. “And in many cases, those students are trying to be come eligible for athletic participation and scholarships.” School resources aid athletes BY RYAN WEST The Battalion NCAA regulations as well as the University’s academic standards force coaches to look further than athletic ability and take into ac count a student athlete’s academic abilities before accepting them into Texas A&M. For this reason, A&M student- athletes competing in varsity sports are offered a variety of sources to aid them academically. Bobby Kummer, A&M’s basket ball coaching assistant, said ath letes residing in Cain Hall have ac cess to a computer lab within the residence hall. Academic advisers are made readily available to help athletes with their schedules and appointments to meet with tutors. Kummer said, while the team is on the road, an academic adviser travels with the team, and around finals, tutors join the adviser so the student athletes can continue to be held responsible for their work. “The NCAA wants them to be just like the rest of the student body,” Kummer said. “We espe cially feel this way at A&M.” see Aid on Page 2. non. ■re, the albumen )dy procession! oberts slow dr n and Martin Ffi ard. im picks thebe: ‘Valentine," a si re love song, an; heme,” a tune: :i! freak show, rre antithesis! n, listeners sW e hidden trad: Home improvement i similarly toad; s up-beatbitis :kle-pop. kerel will debnii; dependent rod:: k and mostly(3 e: A+) — Hedw 1 1m r | ALIMA# ! w/Firny : all. 3-28, 1! 4427 ext 133 /volunteer/ \ ^ km dt ?dy TERRY ROBERSON/The Battalion Shannon Middleton, a senior environmental design major, builds a balsa-wood model of an existing house to test design improvements yesterday in the Langford Architecture Center. NEWS IN BRIEF 16 D RGBS to begin construction sf housing research project search indicates that the design of the house could save enough electrical energy to eliminate the need for commercial nuclear power in this country. am i The Texas A&M University Office of Residential Con crete Building Systems (RGBS) will begin phase one IIconstruction of the passive environmental engi- Bering project today at 2 p.m. [ The RGBS project includes the construction of a pas- live environmental research facility which will use the environment to maintain its own temperature profile. [| The research project is designed to test the hy pothesis that it is possible to use a home’s structural pechanisms as passive heat transfer systems. F The system will in turn maintain a home’s temper ature profile using only the natural environmental con- ptions where the structure is located. [ According to a press release from the Office of Res idential Concrete Building Systems, preliminary re- Outback Steakhouse hosts to raise scholarship money The Outback Steakhouse is sponsoring a luncheon to benefit the Texas A&M University Division of Ad ministration Staff Scholarship today in College Station. The scholarship provides assistance to employees and their dependents within the Division of Adminis tration. Scholarships are awarded on the basis of aca demic achievement and financial need. There will be two seatings for the $10 lunch, one from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and another from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased by calling 862-1769. Judge issues injunction against law-school pact HOUSTON (AP) — A judge yes terday issued a state-requested permanent injunction that blocks Houston’s South Texas College of Law from affiliating with Texas A&M University. The Texas Higher Education Co ordinating Board got the permanent injunction they were seeking against private South Texas College of Law’s affiliation with Texas A&M. State District Judge Suzanne Covington of Austin, in a nine- page judgment, said the agreement between the two schools was void because it clashes with the au thority given to the higher educa tion board by law. “The affiliation agreement is in direct conflict with the statutory scheme set out in the Texas Edu cation Code,” Covington wrote, adding that the pact, if allowed to continue, “would render the role of the Texas Higher Education Co ordinating Board meaningless.” “[The pact] would render the role of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board meaningless” — Suzanne Covington State District Judge While the judge allowed the two schools to continue working together through library and facul ty exchanges, Covington told South Texas to cease using the name of Texas A&M in all of the law school’s logos and literature. The school had been referring to itself as “South Texas College of Law affiliated with Texas A&M University. ” “We will appeal,” Roland Gar cia Jr., attorney for South Texas College of Law, said. Texas A&M currently does not have a law school in its mission statement. South Texas and A&M struck a partnership in January 1998 that would give the Houston law school the A&M name while remaining a $14,000-a-year private school. While such private-public part nerships do exist, Texas A&M’s failure to £et permission from the governing board has tripped up the 41,000-student university’s at tempt to add a law school. Texas A&M officials said the University could not immediately comment on the matter. Regents OK establishment of cardiovascular institute BY SUZANNE BRABECK The Battalion The Texas A&M Board of Regents approved the es tablishment of the Michael E. DeBakey Institute for Comparative Cardiovascular Science, which will be based in the College of Veterinary Medicine. The institute will use the intellectual and financial re sources of the College of Veterinary Medicine, the Dwight Look College of Engineering, the Texas A&M University System Health Science Center’s Cardiovas cular Institute and the Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston to battle cardiovascular disease. It is estimated that cardiovascular disease affects 4 million people annually, at a cost of $10 billion. Richard Adams, dean of veterinary medicine admin istration, said the DeBakey Institute will foster new part nerships among Texas research institutions and private industry. “[Everyone will be] working in concert to better un derstand and better manage circulatory disorders com mon to humans and our animals,” Adams said. Dr. Terry Possum, professor and chief of surgery in the Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, said the program will be beneficial for humans and an imals. “I am a veterinarian, and want to make sure peo ple understand that this is a reciprocal program that helps both animals and people,” she said. “What we learn from humans about cardiovascular disease we use to help animals, and the information we get from the device implemented in the animals will help hu mans.” The institute’s staff will be derived from the consol idation of existing faculty who have been active in car diovascular research. The funding the institute will be gin with is $2 million in private donations and $2 million for the endowment of two chairs, one for surgery and another for cardiology. Other economic contributions towards the institute will be supplied by the existing grants and contracts of the professors and researchers that join the institute. Program goals: 1) To serve as a bridge between small com panies involved with biomedical devices and the government to help them gain approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 2) To promote the collaboration of scientists, health professionals and engineers in the field 3) To develop and implement animal models 4) To achieve FDA approval of pharmaceuticals and biomedical devices Adams said the engineering comes into play with the development of implantable devices for vessels, valves and even aortas. Adams said the institute will bring more attention to A&M and increase collaborations between the colleges. Adams said A&M developed a relationship for decades with DeBakey, a world-renowned surgeon based out of Houston. A&M honored DeBakey by nam ing the institute after him since his development of the left ventricular assist device in conjunction with Mi- croMed Technology. A&M received a grant in November 1997 to inves tigate the left ventricular assist device and has helped modify it. The left ventricular assist device is different than a pacemaker. While a pacemaker helps modify the rhythm and pace the heart beats, the assist device sits next to the heart and is a small pump that pushes blood out of the heart into the blood stream up to ten liters a minute. This lets the heart rest until a trans plant can be found. see Heart on Page 2.