Friday, September 15,2000 ►t Lee deal • Listen to KAMU 90.9 FM at 1:57 p.m. for details on a man sentenced for a bar shooting. • Check out The Battalion online at battalion.tamu.edu. • Aggies dig out of first half deficit Comeback during second half defeats University of Texas-EI Paso, 44-17. Page 1B "It just can’t be justified, am quite troubled by it." nments came just a few • Attorney General Janet ,ed to accept blame, say- is at fault for not provid- ernment with information Dr. Lee, from the begin- he opportunity to answe; link now he needs to look ' rather than expect an apol- he U.S. government, she weekly news conference, hington, the Energy De- issued a one-paragrapii Wednesday: “Dr. lie iilty to a felony admitting Kindled sensitive classified n. That speaks for itself." dge’s stinging criticism i as he signed off on the that freed I we, who plead- i one count of mishandling •rets as the governmental! med its crumbling case Iordan tad contracted the illness .aid her husband, Shk- no, suggesting that kis vife did not receivedtk iroper treatment fromfe itart. The hospital denie; he allegations. In a sign of grow::, mxiety, hospital erne: jency rooms were crow!- ,'d with people with it: nfluenza who thong: hey had the West Nil: . ims. which can bedea;- y for patients with awed mmune system. "We calm them do«: tnd send them home.te more keep coming,” sai Dr. Motte Ravid, directs of internal medicine at: hospital in KfarSava.' iathers ildren nts in prison an estimated 721,500 i women in prison were to 1.5 million children 3. Here is a look at arenthood, based on a rvey. of prisoners who rents cent of male state s lived with their children srison, but now their s' caregivers* include. 89.6 ndparent 13.3 relative 4.9 home/agency 1.8 s/other 4.9 cent of female state s lived with their children prison, but now their s’ caregivers* include . ' 28 WHB1 52.9 MONDAY September 18, 2000 Volume 107 ~ Issue 17 2 Sections 8 pages 6 pages A'4 * I C U'i^rWI ft' Busted! CSPD, UPD aim at disturbance calls By Marium Mohiuddin & Cody Wages The Battalion Battalion photographer Cody Wages rode along with local police of ficers to observe the third weekend of the crackdown on alcohol violations. A disturbance of peace call came into the College Station Police De partment (CSPD) Friday night and was relayed to an unmarked patrol car — a Jeep Cherokee driven by two po lice officers who are part of a unified effort between the University Police Department (UPD) and CSPD to com bat alcohol violations during home football game weekends. CSPD Officer James Elkins and UPD Officer Bobby Richards’ patrol shift typically begins at 11 p.m. on Friday. "We get the [parties] that are called in,” said Sgt. Greg Leeth, CSPD evening patrol supervisor. “If we hap pen to be driving down the road and we see that there is something going on that is out of hand, then we will take care of that, but, as a general rule, we will answer the [disturbance] calls.” See CSPD on Page 6B. Citations decrease during weekend By Marium Mohiuddin The Battalion College Station residents are supporting the task force initiated by the College Station Police De partment (CSPD) and the Univer sity Police Department (UPD) to combat alcohol violations in Col lege Station. The idea was developed a few years ago by CSPD and UPD of ficers and came to life at the be ginning of the Fall 2000 semester. This weekend marks the third time the program has been enforced. See Numbers on Page 2A. CODY WAGES/The Battalion Top: Officers Elkins and Richards (plain clothes) dis cuss a citation with residents. Bottom: After receiving a citation, residents are forced to empty a keg. In pool, ring and court, U.S. team on Olympic roll SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — The U.S. Olympians shared the wealth Sunday: a half-dozen swimmers grabbed medals, a boxer extended his team’s unbeaten streak, and the bas ketball team demolished China in its Sydney debut. Led by gold-medal winning Tom Dolan, who broke his own 6-year-old world record in the 400-meter individ ual medley, the Americans seized the spotlight from Aussie teen sensation Ian Thorpe to capture two golds, three silvers and a bronze. Dolan’s second consecutive Olympic win in the event capped a productive day in the pool for the U.S. team. Teammate Erik Vendt took a silver in the same event — the second one- two U.S. finish of the day. Brooke Bennett and Diana Munz took gold and silver in the 400 freestyle. Dolan, an asthmatic bothered for the last month by a^ iral infection, pc- changed high-five's with Vendt before climbing aboard the lane marker and exhorting the crowd to echo|l% tri umphant screams, \ “It was a tough svvim," said Dolan, 25: “I was feeling it coming home, but I knew if I got out ahead, no one could beat me” Finishing off the medal rusb were 33-year-old Dura Torres, who capped her comeback after a seven-year re tirement with a bronze in the 100 fly, and Ed Moses, who won silver in the 100 breaststroke. Moses finished behind Domenico Fioravanti, who won Italy’s first-ever Olympic gold in the event. Torres could not catch Inge De Bruijn of the Netherlands, who lowered the 100-fly world mark for the third time this year in taking the gold. About the only bad news: Jenny Thompson finished fifth in the fly, her first race after tying the record for most gold medals by a female with her sixth. After two days, the United States led the medals chart with 11 (4 gold, 5 silver, 4 bronze). Host Australia was second with 9 (3-2-4), while France (3-2-1) and China (1-1-4) each had 6. • WOMEN’S SOCCER: The Chi nese team extracted a little payback from its U.S. opponents, with goalie Goa Hong rejecting a penalty shot by Kristine Lilly to preserve a 1-1 tie. Last year, it was U.S. netminder Briana Scurry’s stop of a shootout penalty kick that won the World Cup for the Americans. Goa turned the ta bles with her lunge to stop Lilly in the 74th minute, while Julie Foudy scored the lone goal for the U.S. team. Both teams’ hopes of making the Olympic semifinals hinge on their fi nal group games Wednesday. • MEN^S BASKETBALL: In their first rout du jour, the American hoopsters rolled over China in a game every bit a$ one-sided as its final score: 119-72. China stayed competitive for the game’s' first six minutes, but Ray Allen’s 3-pointer and breakaway dunk started the U.S. domination. The Americans were led by Allen, who had several highlight-reel dunks en route tOj21 points, while Vince Carter had • BlOXINC: After \yatching the first threeflT.S. boxers win in Sydney, Bri an Viloria wanted to keep the team’s rbcord intact. In a tough fight against Russian Sergei Kazakov, the 106- pound Viloria did just that. tlfei 0-year-old Hawaiian built a 6- 1 lead after two rounds, then held on for an 8-6 win over European champi on Kazakov in a first round bout. • MEN’S VOLLEYBALL: The once-mighty U.S. volleyballers stum bled in their first Sydney contest, los ing to Argentina 24-26, 25-23, 25-21, 25-18. The loss raised the possibility that the Americans, twice gold medal winners in the ’80s, could go without medals for the second straight Games. The team finished last in Atlanta in 1996. • WOMEN’S GYMNASTICS: In the land Down Under, things almost went topsy-turvy for the defending gold medalist U.S. women’s team. Af ter competing early Sunday (Saturday night EDT), they waited to see if they would qualify for the Olympic finals. After six anxious hours of waiting, they did — by 0.4 points, barely avoid ing humiliation. Other relative 25.7 ar home/agency 9.6 nds/other 10.4 cent of male state s had contact with their each month through ••• H 42 49.9 isits 21 cent of female state s had contact with their each month through • • 53.6 65.8 23.8 isoners had children in Tomes. r of JustiCG Statistics jJiliJjrjjijijJUuzijjji Rock Prairie Road @ Longmire Drive • Rock Prairie Road <§> Welsh Avenue/Victoria Avenue R'S & Shoe Repair Aade oots m inty 46-4114 • Longmire Drive @ Deacon Drive • Glade Street @ Holleman Drive • Raymond Stotzer Parkway @ Discovery Road • University Drive @ Polo Road Traffic signal construction for the city of College Station will be begin today at Rock Prairie Road and Longmire Drive, with construction of the other traffic lights to follow. The construction is scheduled for completion by November 2000. RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion Skydivers remembered Students mark anniversary of death of 5 Aggies By Jason Lincoln • The Battalion A small single-engine aircraft identifiable only by its tail number, N4803B, took off into an autumn sun set on Sept. 18, 1999. The orange sun was the last glimpse of the world for five Aggie sky divers as their plane, affectionately known as Duct Tape because of its gray frame, stalled 300 feet above the ground be fore crashing and killing all five on board. The tragedy had a profound impact on Aggie sky divers. For Texas A&M Sky Diving Club president Jen ny Hajovsky, it meant losing five of her closest friends. For Carol George, it meant watching her room mate, Sarah Miller, perish less than an hour after George landed from her first jump. Today, on the first anniversary of the crash, the Aggie Sky Diving Club will gather at Coulter Field for a flyover in missing-man formation in remem brance of the tragedy. With the flyover and next weekend’s return to See Sky diving on Page 4B. will memorialize tiie Sept. IB, 1999, tlsattis of five Aggies. £ •Missing man formation flyover of Kyle Field. ’ * Boogie, a series of jumps, Friday everting through Sunday morning at. Coulter Field, the site of the accident RUBEN DELUNA/Thk Battalion CIS shows internet users how to avoid spammers By Richard Bray The Battalion Most email account holders have received unsolicited emails offering credit cards, mortgages and get-rich-quick schemes. These emails are not only an noying, but they also can clog ac counts and waste time while be ing downloaded. In an article titled “Ask the Attorney General: Protecting Yourself on the Internet,” John Cornyn, Texas attorney general, wrote that the lack of regulation of the Internet allows freedom that is not available elsewhere. “The Internet remains almost entirely unregulated, creating ample opportunity for those who choose to engage in undesirable enterprises,” he said. Charles Boatwright, a senior systems analyst for Computing and Information Services, said junk email can do more than just annoy Internet users. “There are some technical downsides to [junk email],” he said. “If you’re running tight on disk space, junk email can eat up your quota and could block the delivery of legitimate email.” Boatwright said spammers, people who send junk email, can get peoples’ email address es from anyone they supply their email address to, especial- ly listserves. See Spamming on Page 2A. —my Limit use s! iistseryes Biiiesi fpSp'iraHriii siamierl [Ciietse interim provider! boar—* aawp—r “ I with strict ami-spam wtieigs] RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion