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106 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Vednesday • November 3, 1999
College Station, Texas
Volume 106 * Issue 48 • 10 Pages
fficials share ‘lessons
earned’ from Littleton
[esponse-team members say preparation key
; q
M
BY STUART HUTSON
The Battalion
On April 20, 1999, Capt. Dave
i/alcher of the Jefferson County
Sheriff’s Department responded to
radio call regarding a distur-
)ance at Columbine High School
|n Littleton, Colo.
Two gunmen had entered the
kchool and opened fire on students
^nd teachers.
“When I got there, the only
tuestions on my mind were
JWhat’s going on here?’ and ‘What
po we have to do to stop it?’”
richer said. “Afterwards, the only
question was ‘Why?’”
The gunmen’s attack left 15 dead
5nd a nation in shock.
Walcher was one of four incident
bommanders from the Columbine
fhootings who spoke at a seminar
yesterday hosted by the Texas Engi-
jieering Extension Service (TEEX) to
fielp spread awareness to prevent an
other such tragedy from happening.
Rick lye, head of the TEEX fire-
protection training division, said
more than 500 representatives
from police and fire departments
and school districts from around
the nation attended the seminar in
hopes of learning how to prevent
or react to situations like the
Columbine shootings.
“It is important to realize that this
can happen absolutely anywhere,”
he said. “What we want to do here is
get together and talk about what
worked and what didn’t.”
Walcher said the most important
lesson to be learned from the shoot
ings is the need for cooperation be
tween all agencies responding.
“I think the excellent cooperation
between all the commanders is what
saved a lot of lives,” he said.
Mike Wisby, program manager
of the TEEX fire-protection training
division, said one of the vital steps
in preventing disasters is for com
munity leaders to join together and
communicate openly.
“Even if it starts off with just a
few people getting together and
having coffee, plans need to be
made so that if a disaster happens,
response teams will be prepared,”
he said. “Even if the disaster is just
an overturned tanker truck, com
munities need to be prepared.”
Wisby said preparation has be
come even more necessary as the
situations encountered become
more unpredictable.
“Events like this just didn’t hap
pen ten years ago,” he said. “Be
fore it was just simple law enforce
ment, but now we have to deal
with more complicated issues, like
terrorist attacks.”
No matter how complicated situ
ations may get, Walcher said, com
munities should do whatever is nec
essary to prevent another incident
like the Columbine shooting.
“Most of the students were just
sitting and eating lunch, just being
high-school students,” he said.
“How can someone not be devas
tated by something like this?”
El Dia de los Muertos
KIMBER HUFF/Thh Battalion
Mito Espinoza (left), a senior history and sociology major, and Gabriel Rendon (right), senior bi
ology major, dress up as skeletons for a procession in honor of El Dia de los Muertos, “The Day of
the Dead,” a holiday celebrating the intertwining of death and life.
â– '.!
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eceive $100
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*88-222-5108
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Bill on profs
go before
A&M senate
BY ERIKA DOERR
The Battalion
The Texas A&M Student Senate will discuss five
bills at a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the John J.
Koldus Building, Governance Room.
Brian Minyard, Senate speaker and a senior
biochemistry and political science major, said the
tudent Ratings Reform Bill will post class evalu-
tions of professors on the Internet.
“The joint committee of the Faculty Senate and
the Student Senate has recommended five evalu-
tion questions, along with a disclaimer of
nonymity,” he said.
Minyard said the College of Business Bill,
vhich would allow business students to declare a
ainor, will be discussed.
“The discussion of the minors in the College of
siness bill will voice the [College of Business]
|tudents feelings of being allowed to have a mi
nor along with their major,” he said.
I Minyard said the Freshman and Transfer Stu
dent Mid-Term Academic Advising Bill, which
Would offer students with a 2.0 midterm grade-
point ratio formal advising, is new business on the
Senate’s agenda.
I The Senate will also discuss a bill that would
Change spring student election dates.
I Paul Jackman, Student Senate rules and regu-
lations chair and a junior aerospace engineer, said
the Election Dates Revisions Bill will, if passed,
permanently set election dates from before spring
break to after spring break.
>_ Justin Toal, Senate speaker pro tempore and a
^ -senior agronomy and business major, said the
Islamic convert to discuss faith,
misconceptions, current issues
ency RelationsD
JP BEATO/Thk Battalion
Constituency Relations Bill is critical to determine
the Senate’s success for the future by making sen
ators accountable to their constituency.
“This internal bill will make it mandatory for
student senators to be more accountable through
forming constituency reports and reach out to our
constituents, whom elected us,” he said. Minyard
said the final discussion of old business will be
about creating a voting site at the George Bush
School of Government and Public Service.
“When elections come around in the spring, we
would like students who are out at the George
Bush School to have easier access to the. voting
sites without the inconvenience of voting on cam
pus,” he said.
Minyard said Alpha Phi Omega, a national coed
service fraternity, will be honored for their con
tributions to the Brazos County Girls Club.
“One resolution which will be discussed is the
Alpha Phi Omega, Xi Delta Chapter Recognition
Resolution,” he said. “Alpha Phi Omega has of
fered their surplus fund raising to the Brazos
County Girls Club to help keep the club running.
Student Government [Association] feels we
should work to publicize the extraordinary work
of other student organizations.”
BY MATT LOFTIS
The Battalion
Dr. David Zwink, a convert to the Islamic religion,
will present a perspective on the Muslim belief system
and its response to current issues in “Islamic: Hu
manity’s Quest for Peace” as part of Islam Awareness
Week, tonight at 7:15 in Rudder 301.
Mohamed Mostafa, president of the Muslim Student
Association (MSA) and an electrical engineering grad
uate student, said many Americans are not properly
informed about the Islamic religion, and this lecture
will aid in comprehension.
“By understanding Islam and how it deals with so
cietal problems and other issues, Americans may find
new ideas to solve their own problems,” he said.
Iqbal Latheef, a MSA member and a lecturer with the
chemical engineering department, said Zwink has been
involved with the Islamic Society of North America and
works with the Somali Relief Fund.
Latheef said Zwink is the best speaker for this sub
ject because he was raised in the American culture.
Islamic Awareness Week
Speaker:
Dr. David Zwink
Topics:
-presentation on
Muslim beliefs
-discussion of Islamic
responses to current
events
Time/Place:
7:15 p.m. Rudder 301
ROBERT HYNECEK/Thk Battalion
“We view Islam not as a religion in the traditional sense
but more as a way of life,” Latheef said. “We will talk
about society today, the problems it faces, what Islam does
see Islamic on Page 2.
Health Science Center
names executive head
INSIDE
Starting At:
49.95
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ms
Inspection
Aggielife
•Housework 101
Discover the
dos and
don’ts of
domesticity.
Wul'/T} Pa g e 3
Sports
A&M heads to Big 12 tourney
ie soccer team begins single
elimination tournament action
today in San Antonio.
Page 7
•Model children?
^Columnists debate the ethics
, of the sale of
^models’ eggs on
an Internet site.
Page 9
Batt Radio
Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57
p.m. for details on a car-crash
simulation.
Administration considers
readopting requirements
BY AMANDA SMITH
The Battalion
Texas A&M administration is
considering readopting the pre
vious requirements for comput
er-science and foreign-language
credits, which were dropped for
the Class of 2003.
Freshmen entering school
this semester are recommend
ed, but not required, to com
plete two full years of high-
school coursework in a foreign
language or demonstrate profi
ciency in a foreign language by
examination. Also, students
may be required to complete
one full year of computer-sci
ence coursework in high school
or demonstrate proficiency on
an examination provided by the
Texas A&M University Office of
Measurement and Research
Services.
Two weeks ago, the Faculty
Senate passed a resolution
which would again make the
computer science and the for
eign language classes require
ments. The requirements will
be noted in the 2000-2001 cata
log if A&M President Dr. Ray M.
Bowen approves the resolution.
Dr. Tom Wehrly, Faculty Sen
ate speaker and a statistics pro
fessor, said most students have
already fulfilled the require
ments during their high-school
education.
“For most Texas students, it
can be satisfied by a high school
education,” he said. “Properly
speaking, then, it is not a course
requirement, because it can be
satisfied in high school. If you go
back to the catalog about two
years ago, those are the require
ments we are recommending be
implemented.”
Mark Weichold, associate
provost for undergraduate pro
gramming, said A&M students
should be required to complete
some computer-science and for
eign-language instruction.
“I think it’s a good thing to
have in place,” he said. “I think
see Curriculum on Page 2.
BY KENNETH MACDONALD
The Battalion
Elvin E. Smith has been named ex
ecutive vice president of the new
Texas A&M University System Health
Science Center, which opened in Jan
uary, by Dr. Jay Noren, future presi
dent of the health and science center.
The former Health Science Center
consisted of the College of Medicine
and School of Rural Public Health and
was part of the University only. The
new System Health Science Center
will include three more institutions,
the Baylor College of Dentistry in Dal
las, the Graduate School of Biomed
ical Sciences and the Institute for Bio
sciences and Technology in Houston.
Smith, who has worked for A&M
for 24 years, has been involved in al
most every aspect of health science in
the Texas A&M System.
“This is a very rewarding experi
ence to work with the creation of the
School of Rural [Public] Health and
now the creation of the System Health
Science Center,” he said. “It is a great
opportunity for leadership.”
Smith was hired in 1975 to head
the Department of Medical Physiolo
gy and served as associate dean, in
terim and acting dean and associate
vice president for the the former A&M
Health Science Center.
Smith said the Health Science Cen
ter is a way to carry on the tradition of
A&M’s land-grant university status. A
PATR1C SCHNEIDER/The Battalion
Elvin E. Smith has been named ex
ecutive vice president for the
Health Science Center,
land-grant university is a school to
grant money is allocated for agricul
tural and mechanical studies.
“A land-grant university is a coop-
see Smith on Page 2.
‘Lone Star Tourist’: medical science
originates from ancient Greek treatise
BY ROLANDO GARCIA
The Battalion
The origins of what is known today as medical science
can be traced to ancient Greece, Dr. John Cooper said yes
terday to the Texas A&M Department of Philosophy.
Cooper, Stuart professor of philosophy at Princeton Uni
versity, read and discussed his paper “Method and Science
in On Ancient Medicine,” an analysis of the Greek medical
treatise attributed to the Greek physician Hippocrates.
“Hippocrates argued a physician’s success is not
based on chance but on knowledge and solid reason
ing,” he said. “It’s in this ancient medical tradition that
something we recognize as truly scientific was devel
oped and pursued.”
In particular, Hippocrates rejected the ideas of the pre-
Socratic philosophers of his time, who insisted diseases
were caused by simple elements like hot and cold and wet
and dry. Instead of relying on abstract principles, Hip
pocrates advocated understanding the specific causes of
diseases and why they afflicted certain people, Cooper said.
“In these early medical writings we see very refined ideas
about how to combine scientific observation with theoret
ical ideas of phenomena involved with diseases,” he said.
For example. Cooper said, Hippocrates noted cheese
caused flatulence and constipation among some people,
while it had no effect on others.
Hippocrates also is known as the author of the Hippo
cratic Oath, the oath all doctors must take, pledging not to
use their skills to do harm to their patients. Cooper said
these early writings on medical ethics still affect the cur
rent debate over euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide.
“The oath was probably a self-protective move on the
part of Hippocrates,” he said. “It’s a simple prescription,
not backed up with any moral reasoning.”
Cooper, the 1999 Lone Star Tourist, also will speak at
see Lone on Page 2.