THURSDAY October 26, 2000 Volume 107 ~ Issue 45 2 Sections A 8 pages B 6 pages Imusi ed or distributed. Four •es — each devised b): technology company- tm invisible watermark ie detected by a digitak Two other measures inv; it technology, security measures art to prevent illegal cop: cut over the Internet fra yed on a computer or e digital music player at comply with SDMb ny files without the invt ’ measures. rffins undin arch fo ct kids 'E PARK, Maine (AP)- rching for the bodies of missing from a religious ly located a pair of s: 'uesday. »Wmi A t WlV'VlWi I»J OlUi 4; WI i’i The heat is on STUART VILLANUEVA/Tm Battalion Firefighting recruits Scott Howard of Plano and Chad Dismukes of Brenham crouch under the smoke while extinguishing a fire during a drill at the Brayton Fire School on Wednesday. Temperatures in the house reach up to 800 degrees. A&M, Verizon offer discount DSL deal “What the contract really al lows is for a student or faculty or staff member who wants to get DSL service at their home, to first, get a slightly better rate be cause they are going through the contract, and secondly, to have a link come directly through cam pus instead of an ISP,” he said. Magnussen said A&M ap proached Verizon in order to of fer students, faculty and staff with an alternative to a cable mo dem connection. “Anything that makes sense for our students, faculty and staff, we want to be able to support,” he said. “Since Verizon is really the only company in town that can provide DSL service, and since we knew people would want DSL service, we went to them and put together a contract that would provide some benefit •to the students.” Verizon will provide asym metric DSL (ADSL), which is See DSL on Page 6A. By Richard Bray T/je Battalion In order to provide off-campus students with faster Internet ac cess, Computing and Information Services (CIS) and the Telecom munications Department have signed a contract with Verizon to provide off-campus students, faculty and staff with digital sub scriber line (DSL) service. DSL differs from .cable modems because DSL uses tele phone lines as opposed to cable television connections, said Chris Noynaert, an associate re search engineer for CIS. “Basically, it’s a method the phone company has to put data communications over your reg ular telephone line,” he said. “On the cable modems, the data is multiplexed with your televi sion service, and in the case of DSL, the data is multiplexed in with your voice.” Noynaert said the advantage to using DSL is that cable con nections slow down when many people use the network at once, but DSL will remain at a consis tent speed regardless of how many people are online. “The main difference between the two is that the DSL is essen tially a private line, whereas the cable data service is more like a party line where you are sharing the bandwidth with a number of other users,” he said. “On cable, if everyone else is using the con nection real heavily, you are es sentially sharing that bandwidth with those other people. If every one else is asleep, it will go just as fast as the DSL link.” Through the contract with Verizon, students will be able to receive the service at a lower price and will be able to use DSL with the A&M network rather than having to pay for a separate Internet service provider (ISP) to provide access, said Walt Mag nussen, associate director for telecommunications. mber of the Massachm he search team to thesfi itate Park after repoi a deal with prosecutors : Warden Lt. Pat Dorian believed to be coffins kvith the help of cada Jogs and probes that ground. Wardens were o the site with shovels •gs- have found the »oing to try to exhum is afternoon,” Dorian a d arch of the Rou ^o Garcia V&M athlete graduation rate ichind others iuren pi me j »s preserve begaw'A to^ ,e lember David Comead Student athletes’ accom- eofthe two missing banishments on the field can lead authorities to the tieetrify crowds, but, accord- hange for immunity fi g to recently released fig- - -• “es by the Registrar’s Office, eir performance in the assroom lags behind the rest the Texas A&M student filiation. According to the 1993-’94 >n for himself and his« s part of a search team i into a remote area vial d Mark Latti, spokes aine Department of In. at least five miles on tips from former police searched Bi several times last yea' ling. lirois, chief of staff for attorney Paul F. Wals and Wildlife. The nea lro i[ ment fig Ure s, the gradu- ron rate for student athletes as 63 percent, compared to percent for all students, hese are the most recent available figures because grad- idon rates are determined six ars after a class enrolls ac- They have nd the site that Walsh, prosecutorsj)rding to NCAA procedures. In some cases, when indi- pdual sports are examined, e gap widens even more, he graduation rates for foot- til players and men’s basket- iz an ino fl? 1 P la y ers ^ 38 P ercent and y r t, g\jin£ lu |3percent, respectively. to exhumt I ^ data t ts f 16 Riation record of students en- hodieS Med in the 1993-’94 school |ear and counts student ath- rternoon. pes as those students who re- ieived athletic scholarships. p a tDorii| Bait Childs, chairman of ine Warden LieuteJ le Athletic Council and a —— lomputer science professor, laid the failure of many ath- accompaniedComeati tes to graduate is partly the Robert George, to I* Kult of different priorities. :r, Sirois would noli “There’s too many peo- ast and newspaper re? diat came here to play about an agreemefli ecutors and Corneae. ies have been looking )f Corneau’s son, let , and Samuel Robid® lly starved to deaths after he stopped concerned that ejection of convenlii) id other beliefs mayf to their deaths, nbers, based intheso* isachusetts city ofA®* recognize the legal? lained silent for m nd jury investigating icarance. 33, was one of eij the group jailed for? pond to the grand Ie was freed last iW :he Fifth Amendm# s pregnant wife. Rd ecently held instate udge expressed coi»| 1-being of the ave birth last week ft lains in state custody decided by the 0# nd never really intended to e students,” Childs said. It's easy to get caught in he hoopla and forget the student’ part of ‘student Ithlete.’ ” Although the NCAA re quires athletes to make some progress toward grad uation each year to remain eligible, compliance with the guidelines does not guarantee enough hours to graduate, even after six years, Childs said. The grades of student ath letes tend to be lower than those of other students. In Fall 1999, 63 percent of athletes posted a grade-point ratio of 3.0 or lowdr, according to the Athletic Department, com pared to 49 percent of all stu dents, according to the Regis- trar’s Office. Childs said the main factor behind the lackluster academ ic performance of many stu dent athletes is the lower ad missions criteria set for athletes. Athletes must meet mini mal NCAA standards, and not the more stringent standards that A&M applies to other students. High school students graduating in the first quarter must have at least a'920 on their SAT. According to NCAA requirements, student athletes can get into A&M with a score as low as 820. As a result, many athletes’ acad emic skills lag behind those of the rest of the student body. “Like every major uni versity, athletes are admitted with lower academic stan dards than other students,” Childs said. “Particularly for [football and basketball], many of the athletes we re cruit were not great students in high school.” See Athletes on Page 2A. 71°/o 63% 38% 33% iJATION RATES student body student athlete football athlete men s basketball athlete student athletes GPR < 3.0 other fl&M students (1999 figures) tfccordmg fo '93 - '94 (most n?c«?nt figures available) RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion Board to improve Wolf Pen Creek Plans indude drainage, street extension and bridge connection By Kristin Rostran ’ - ■ The Battalion From shabby to chic — development projects to im prove the Wolf Pen Creek district are in the works. A proposal to add man-made lakes to the area has grown into plans for a recreational area focused on arts, parks and commerce. A plan was developed in 1988 to take full advantage of the undeveloped area from Harvey Road to Colgate Circle and from Texas Avenue to the feeder on the Earl Rudder Freeway bypass. Since then, the area of Wolf Pen Creek has been growing, but at a slow pace. Trails for jogging and biking were built, along with the first of the man-made lakes. However, bad drainage hindered further development. Kay Henryson, chair of Wolf Pen Creek advising re view board, said bad drainage caused large amounts of silt deposits to fall into the lake and cover trails. “The lake around the amphitheater kept being filled with the silt deposits,” Henryson said. “The water com ing from campus and the rest of College Station got trapped in that area, and it didn’t look nice.” McClure Engineering was hired to resolve the drainage issues and create the remaining lakes. Howev er, the firm found that an area near the southwest corner of Dartmouth Street and Holleman Drive is a wetlands area. Building in a wetlands area requires special permits. “We are looking at protecting the area and using it to educate kids about wetlands,” Henryson said. The first signs of progress will be drainage im provements and the extension of George Bush East. The city is still in the process of obtaining bids for the George Bush Drive extension, but construction should begin by May. A plan to extend Dartmouth Street to City Park was also proposed. A bridge spanning the creek wilLconnect Harvey Road to Holleman Drive, which is currently an un developed area. Students from the architecture department, archi tects and architect interns presented several ideas for the future of Wolf Pen Creek Saturday. Business and private owners volunteered ideas to benefit the area. Instead of contracting a company to develop these ideas, the city uses the volunteers and donates the saved money to.scholarships for A&M students. This year, See Wolf Pen on Page 6A. Harvey Rd. WOLF PEN CREEK MASTER PUN Dartmouth TEAMS: 1 - Upper Corridor - North 2 - Upper Corridor - South 3 - South Quadrant 4 - North Quadrant 5 - Festival Area 6 - lower Corridor RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion RHA proposes resolution Gramm, to clear hall Bonfire closets Hutchl ! on By Sommer Bunce The Battalion Hart Hall representatives presented a resolution to Residence Life to clear , Bonfire closets in residence halls. The resolution, presented at the Residence Hall Association (RHA) General As sembly Wednesday proposed donating the Bonfire items to the Department of Anthropology. The closets contain Bonfire equip ment— such as axes, machetes and oth er gear — owned by each hall. Resi dence Life originally planned to clean out the closets during the summer and give the items to Dr. Sylvia Greider, who had been overseeing the collection of other Bonfire memorabilia, including items placed along the fence at the site of the 1999 Aggie Bonfire collapse. RHA President Josh Kaylor, a junior agricultural development major, request ed that Residence Life delay the action until the residence halls have time to con sider the action. Residence Life original ly set the deadline for 5:30 p.m. today for halls to contact Kaylor to have a hold placed on the donation of closet items. Hart Hall Council President Stephen Blaskey asked the assembly of hall council presidents and voting delegates to consider giving halls more time to re view their closets. “Right now, in our hall, a 5:30 dead line coming up is not enough time to look at something this serious in that short an amount of time,” Blaskey said. “I’m coming up here to ask for a little more time to deal with this.” Proposed by Blaskey, the Hall Clos et Resolution was not on the agenda. Hart Hall representatives handed out “And, there's the axes and machetes and everything else in the closet” — Josh Kaylor RHA president and a junior agricultural development major copies of their resolution to attendees and requested that it be considered be fore the assembly. Representatives of Schumacher Hall seconded the motion. The majority of halls do not have Bon fire closets, Kaylor said, explaining that most house their supplies off campus. The proposed resolution would affect no more than 10 halls. In the view of Residence Life, those hall closets are departmental closets now because Bonfire leadership no longer exists within the halls. Removing the equipment from the closets would give each hall’s closet back, Kaylor said. The basic reason the decision was made by Residence Life and not the hall councils was lack of proof of ownership, he said. He said that, even though he bought items for his hall’s Bonfire closet, he could not prove which equipment was his without a receipt. “And, there’s the axes and machetes and everything else in the closet,” he .said. “If you were the department of Residence Life, you wouldn’t want to put that back in the hands of everyone who says he owns it and have it in the residence halls, because it’s now con sidered a weapon. There’s no need for it. “It’s not like you’re going to use [the weapons] for any hall council activities,” Kaylor said, referring to the programs and different events each hall sets up for its residents. “But it doesn’t matter,” he said. “It’s a good idea.” All halls voted to pass the Hall Closet Resolution, making inventory of the clos ets the responsibility of each hall council See RHA on Page 6A. Gramm, Hutchison support Bush record WASHINGTON (AP) — Texas Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison and Phil Gramm took to the Senate floor Wednesday to defend the Lone Star State and GOP candidate George W. Bush from criticism by Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. Kennedy, using time set aside for personal business, discussed a host of issues including health care and education but focused his re marks on Texas. He cited a recent study released by Rand, a California-based think tank, that said Texas students’ progress on national tests was about as good as other students. And he criticized the state’s record on providing health in surance for children. He had hardly finished his com ments when Hutchison took the floor to defend Texas and Bush. “I am not going to stand here, and I am not going to sit in my office and listen to anyone else that uses Texas as a whipping boy,” Hutchison said. “It is absolutely unconscionable to trash Texas to get an advantage in the presidential race.”