Tuesday, Augusi 2} J towe ting flat a female elevator upped about 860 feet k said Nikolai Sarychev.il lent spokesman at thesci! 1,771-foot futuristic tu; like a giant needle, isapiii st attraction. It hasanots eck and restaurant about! f the way up. The firesti ove that level, and ol Listen to KAMU 90.9 FM at 1:57 p.m. for details on a Brazos Valley Veterans' memorial hearing. • Check out The Battalion online at battalion.tamu.edu. Howdy, Dammit! Aggie traditions * bring uniqueness ^ and unity/Traditions can be annoying and alienating. Page 3A Weather: Partly cloudy with a high of 99 and a low of 74. WEDNESDAY August 30, 2000 Volume 107 ~ Issue 4 2 Sections A 8 pages B 6 pages visitors were evacuatd, chev said no one so fan led or injured in thebte . cause of the fire wasncj ^ dy known, but initialriy apparently was sta rcuit in equipmentkte paging company, fire began at about 3:3(1 w night, flames and sn ut of much of the tower, ver a large park, andapfa e towered over the citv. age helicopter cap#I LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Pres- ,7 water from a aianf fknt.Clinton said Tuesday he should uuzht to the scene bu!'l ot l ie ^ s ^ arre ^ over his testimony in Me Paula Jones sexual harassment Base, telling a state judge that losing his |i\v license is too harsh a penalty. I In a five-page response to a com- llaint filed by the Arkansas Supreme |lourt Committee on Professional Conduct, the president said that court recedents in Arkansas would pro- ibit a stiff sanction. “On the basis of the relevant facts, e governing law and the applicable cisions of the Arkansas courts ..., a Sanction of disbarment would be ex- iessively harsh, impermissibly puni- Jve and unprecedented in the cir- FICAN CITY (AP) - qumstances of this case,” Clinton’s ohn Paul 11 basked Suni hwyers wrote. •.uccess of the church’skl fh e sta te conduct committee says rid Youth Day laudinsiflP 10 P res >dent lied about his relation- .s and petceM’jmff 'S who took pan. it. under oath, in January 1998. ■ six-day gatheringpealtl Jhe president’s lawyers agreed 9-20. An estimated Hits with the state’s claim that Clinton pilgrims camped las trying to save face when asked ght outside Rome topibout Lewinsky, elebrate Mass with lot I - one of Europe's bi©| Clinton "took CIC- assemblies ever, leir great numbers maiil impression on all,' ! Jrl aid Sunday, speaking \ 1 gathered in thecourtui summer retreat atCasit j Ifo outside Rome, yous, peaceful youngs udy to smile and say tful of the city and' the pope said. For thejf he said, the event the first step in thepaf (■>*'< ^-1 • i 11] eik’l 4; WI it linton r nay race disbarment nediately deployed. nillion tend nth day f list be followed.’ : youn tions motivated in part by a desire to protect himself and others from embarrassment.” — President Clinton's lawyers in a written statement High cotton A&M policy deferred Gay Ags question clause removal from Website STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion Roy Llanes Sr., an agricultural worker, labels and clips cotton plants at the Texas A&M Agricultural Research Center Tuesday. The cotton is to be used in research to produce disease-resistant varieties of the crop. By Rolando Garcia The Battalion Jubilation quickly turned to anger and frustration among gay student activists at Texas A&M after A&M President Dr. Ray M. Bowen did an about-face and re scinded a new clause in the 2000- 2001 student rules that would prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. New rules were posted Aug. 15 on the student rules Website, listing sexual orientation as one of the protected categories cov ered by anti-discrimination poli cy. But gay students had little time to savor their victory — within 24 hours, the sexual ori entation clause was removed and the previous wording, which does not list protected groups, was reinserted. “[Administrators] have made no attempt to explain what hap pened,” said Jordan Davis, presi dent of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Aggies (GLB- TA) and a junior English major. “We wanted a commitment in writing because all we have now is the slaveowner’s word that he won’t beat the slave, and, just as slaves don’t trust the master, we don’t trust the University.” Davis added that, while the University has taken steps to protect gay students from ha rassment and discrimination, the reworded statement that Bowen removed would have created an official enforcement mechanism and compel the University to foster a non-hostile environment for gay students. Amy Hinze, a senior sociol ogy major, said the symbolic value of the rescinded clause was important. “It’s a great victory just to have sexual orientation recog nized,” she said. “That would have sent a very good message.” The reversal was prompted by a press release distributed by gay student activists announc ing the rule change, said Asso ciate Vice President for Student Affairs Dr. Bill Kibler. “What hap pened is not a change in poli cy, but simply a rewording of the existing rule” — Dr. Bill Kibler associate vice president for Student Affairs “[The students’] immediate response was to claim this change meant something different than what it really meant,” Kibler said. “What happened is not a change in policy, but simply a rewording of the existing rule.” In Fall 1999, Bowen vetoed a proposal passed by the Stu dent Senate and the Faculty Senate to specifically prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, citing the le gal liability that would be placed on the University if it ex tended anti-discrimination pro tection to categories not cov ered by state and federal law. The new clause was intend ed to clarify that University rules do protect gay students from harassment, including physical, sexual and emotional harassment, Kibler said. “If, for example, a faculty member treats and grades a stu dent differently just because that student is gay, we can do some thing about that,” Kibler said. Bowen has deferred imple mentation of the reworded state ment until there is sufficient un derstanding of what it actually means, Kibler added. Davis defended the students’ press release and said Bowen re scinded the rule change in retali ation for the media attention gay students have brought to the issue. “A lot of money is riding on the fact that this is a bastion of racism, sexism and homopho bia,” he said. “A lot of parents send their kids here and alumni make donations to this Universi ty because of that image.” Davis also said, despite assur ances from some administrators that they would continue to meet with gay student leaders to ham mer out an understanding, that Bowen was quick to dismiss him and another student when they went to the president’s office to schedule a meeting. “Bowen came out, and, in a rather curt, hostile and unprofes sional way, said there would not be any meetings,” Davis said. Bowen was unavailable for comment. g people for a W i 1 , dLUUlls 1I U . a c r r , to. by a desire to protect hi ed - or outnumbered' C,’,/ from el X rrassm , ication-time populaii i av!/ y ( Clinton “took actions motivated, in himself and arrassment,” the ers wrote. ne- ■ A federal judge found Clinton in city managed the throt contempt and fined him more than :w reported problems.lfpO,000, saying he intentionally gave t was a subway esc* misleading testimony while she icked under the weigl P^ed oyer the deposition. f njifl Clintons lawyers also acknowl- ' ^ c s " 1 ■= edged that the president did not fight several. the contempt citation, but said he did n Paul started the wjbt do so because the needs of the idition in 1984. The kit country came first, ing was in the Philippic} f Jones filed suit in May, 1994, alleg- sTwhen 4 million yowg Clinton made a crude sexual ad- Local police crack down on alcohol use attended. jyance toward her three years earlier in a Little Rock hotel room. Jones had foped to use evidence of the Lewinsky affair as part of an attempt to show a paitem of predatory behavior. I U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright, however, said the Lewinsky material was not essential to Jones’ base, and later dismissed Jones’ lawsuit. ByMarium Mohiuddin The Battalion The College Station Police Department and the University Police Department an nounced the creation of a new task force to combat alcohol violations this semester. “This [last] weekend we handed out 210 ci tations, which include MIP, public intoxica tion and consumption of alcohol after hours,” said Bob Wiatt, director of UPD. “This week end it was active because students were com ing back in town and settling in.” The task force is a combined effort be tween. the two police departments. Last weekend was the first time the program was enforced. The focus now turns to football game weekends, because there will be more people in town, Wiatt said. “We want to make sure that kids know that they are accountable to the law,” he said. “We are trying to get the word out to students that they can’t drink under the age of 21, but kids are still doing it.” Wiatt said the crackdown is a response to A&M’s being plagued with tragic alcohol- related accidents. “We have had many deaths because of al cohol poisoning,” he said. “There was also that one student who was killed last January when he fell down the Southside Parking Garage stairs because he was drunk. We are just trying to make the campus safer.” The idea was introduced a few years ago by CSPD, UPD and Charles Sippial, then-assis tant vice president for Physical Plant and now- vice president for administration. “This is just the first year that it has been implemented,” Wiatt said. The Bryan Police Department also is faking steps to reduce the number of alcohol citations. BPD has adopted a zero-tolerance policy. “1 have been on the force for 27 years, and we have always had a first-time warning policy,” said Sgt. Ernie Mon toya, public relations officer for BPD. “But now they are taking it away. You will get a citation for an MIP and you will be arrested if you are furnishing al cohol to minors because it is an ar restable offense.” Last weekend BPD handed out four citations and arrested seven people for alcohol violations. Although they are not on the same task force, the three police depart ments, the Sherriff’s Department and the Texas Alcohol and Beverage Com mission are independently the same types of practices. Montoya said the easiest way for people to avoid citations and arrest is to use discre tion and not break laws. ALCOHOL PROBLEMS |210^H THIS WEEKEND THERE WERE Minor in Possesion Public intoxication Consumption ,.Citations College Station after Hours 4 Citations in Bryan 7 Arrests in Bryan for contributing to minors BRANDON HENDERSON/The Battalion illions, but Co-op tial cash while ! It also provides h Ind out about the )r you. PM ♦ 402 Rud ♦ 402 Rudd 5 M CIS enforces printing charge Students will be billed for printouts in excess of 150 pages STUART VILLANUEVA/Thi: Battalion ♦ 402 Rudd^ ichael Neerman, a senior biology major, picks up his printouts at the Student Computing Center. Stu- Mnts will be charged for excess prints during the fill and spring semesters. ve into your career! By Richard Bray The Battalion Starting Fall 2000, the Depart ment of Computing and Informa tion Services (CIS) will charge stu dents for printing in the Open Access Computing Labs. Each student will be allocated a total of 150 pages for the fall and spring semesters and 75 pages for the summer semester, which is cov ered in computing fees. When the quota is reached, students will be charged 4.9 cents per black-and- white printed page. Students had been charged for only transparency, color and specialty printing last year. My Print Charges, an application located on University computer desktops, will allow students to see how many pages they have printed and how much they will be charged. “Increased printing was costing us much more money than we were bringing in from the Computer Ac cess Fee,” said Tom Putnam, direc tor of CIS. The new charges were implemented to recover some of the printing costs. “We did take it to the Student Government last fall and informed people about it and asked for input on different ways of structuring it,” he said. “One of the possibilities was raising the Computer Access Fee. The problem with that possi bility is that it makes everyone pay when in fact the problem of exces sive use is really limited to a small minority of the student population. “We also considered not subsi dizing any of the printing but just charging from the outset like many universities do, like the University of Texas, for example. I think the opinion was that people liked hav ing the existing Computer Access Fee subsidy in place,” Putnam said. Other universities have taken similar action in the past, which have caused student printing to de crease, Putnam said. „ “The experience that has been reported by other universities has been that, when people have to think of printing as something that actually costs money, then they are much less frivolous in their use and more responsible,” he said. “Usu ally, what happens initially, is the people print about half of what (they) had been printing before charges were put in place.” Sue Dowling, computer equip ment supervisor for CIS, said the new charges will force students to prioritize what they need to print. “The students will have to put more thought into the planning or the importance of what needs to be printed,” she said. AOC advises on study program By Mariano Castillo The Battalion The Academic Opera tions Committee (AOC) deans advised the Corps of Cadets unit commanders and their scholastics personnel to re-evaluate the Corps study program at a forum Tuesday. The forum was arranged to discuss concerns the AOC deans had about freshman cadets not faring as well as their non-reg counterparts. The effectiveness of Call to Quarters (mandated study time), class loads for fresh men, average graduation rate and use of faculty advisers as a resource were among the issues brought to the floor. Associate Dean of Archi tecture Rodney Hill said the Corps regimentation can dis rupt the creative process, of ten resulting in less time spent on scholastic projects. Cadets argued that the AOC deans need to consider the time new cadets need to invest in the Corps in order to fully reap its benefits. Paul Jackman, 1st Group commander and a senior aerospace engineering ma jor, said cadets who take smaller class loads tradition ally get good grades and bal ance Corps and academic re sponsibilities without extending their college ca reers more than non-reg stu dents. The Corps offers aca demic support to cadets, including quiz files and free tutoring from the O.R. Simp son Honor Society. See AOC on Paoe ~> *