■■ at the Ca r.U'd’s 1)00 til. ch has toiini of cinnamH * can dest ice; a solutit •phates can ■, a pathogc rb ginkgob eria. .sure system )\v Internal is attract® is submerse! ected to cm ally damaf: fleeting the! ors that ®i it treatmetiti to the svste: WEDNESDAY' June 27, 2001 Volume 107 ~ Issue 162 6 pages News in Brief isive ing i a (Line)! rth Coupon) ). )nc C0928 reduction usen '90 > Tutoring -4746) — Campus g football to be object of TV show The Texas A&M football |eam will be the subject of the remier episodes of ESPN's rime-time reality-based series Sidelines." The series, which is sched- led to begin Oct. 5, is in tended to document the sea- Hon of prominent teams as Hold by the less visible, less cel- Hbrated people who are in volved with the team. I Students, faculty, media, lo- Hal store owners, parents and Hspiring players will be the fo- Hus instead of star players and Hoaches. I "Coach Slocum and I made Hhe decision to be a part of this Hxciting venture with ESPN," Haid Wally Groff, Texas A&M HtNetics director, in an A&M ^■ress release. "We couldn't be ^more thrilled that ESPN has Hhosen Texas A&M for this se- Hes. The opportunity ESPN Save us to showcase this won- Serful institution and all of its Hadition and heritage is some- Hiing we could not pass up." H Current turmoil resulting (Horn the 1999 Aggie Bonfire 11 collapse and the celebration of me University's 125th anniver- sjary are among storylines that are to be featured in the series. I "Each person has a role to Hlay with the team, as well as a flHersonal story," said Mark Hhapiro, vice president and general manager of ESPN Orig- ipal Entertainment, in an A&M ^ press release. " 'Sidelines' will *e each person grow in char acter as the season progresses. . yVe'll weave the smaller per- 1®>nal stories together through tihe bigger story of the pro- gr ssion and fate of the team iHid its season." State Sheriff denies fired ants >, >re bindWal-M officer's appeal I GEORGETOWN (AP) — Williamson County Sheriff John paspero on Tuesday refused to reinstate a former county cor- lions officer who was fired for being a member of the Ku Kjux Klan. ■ A disciplinary review board last week voted unanimously to fire Sgt. Greg Palm, 29, af ter it was determined that his membership in the Klan amounted to conduct Unbe coming for a sheriff's office employee. Deputy David Gay also was fired. I According to Maspero's of- , . — . —'#ice, Palm met with the sheriff Hesday morning to appeal the decision and claimed his group is actually a church. . H Maspero's staff, however, iOt tne Htermined that the "Church 'vice. of the National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Inc." is a for- Jalance profit corporation in Indiana, . not a tax-exempt church. otatiofl k vjrMi m i k f i UJI * lu ii a Head-on collision closes Highway 6 STUART VILLANUEVA/Twf Battalion Department of Public Scifety Officer Jonathan Hunter and driver of the Grand Am, 38-year-old Tina Donahue of Robertson County Depiuty Tim Skeid view, the wreckage New York, was Life flighted to Scott & White Memorial of a Pontiac Grand Am that collided head-on with an 18- Hospital in Temple. The driver of the 18-wheeler, Alfred wheeler on Highway 6, two miles north of Calvert. The Garcia of Houston, was treated for minor injuries. Vet college looks for cure FIV studies could lead to vaccine, eradication of HIV Justin Smith The Battalion Since HIV and AIDS arrived in the United States in 1981, many questions have arisen, but answers cannot be' found fast enough. Texas A&M is doing its part to un ravel some of these questions. One way is by studying ho\w the feline counterpart to HIV, called Feline Imunod- eficiency Virus (FIV), affects cats. The Col lege of Veterinary Medicine is tr/ing to find a cure or vaccine for FIV in ho pe that the information might be used to atssist in developing a cure or vaccine for h umans. In another study, Michelle Cal varese, a geography graduate student, is study ing the lifestyles of many African cul tures affect the spread of the disea se. She is examining population density and sex ual practices — two primary factors that impact how the disease is spread. AIDS is the acronym for Acquinsd Im munodeficiency Syndrome and HIV stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus. AIDS is the latter stages of HIV in fection. The virus is transmitted throug h sev eral possible ways. The most commonly known is through unprotected sex, but an other way that often occurs is through blood transfusions. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the latter method is now highly unlikely since blood is thoroughly tested before it is used. Other methods to contract the virus are through drug users sharing needles and by pregnant women passing it to their children. According to the National Institute of Al lergy and Infectious Diseases, with advances in medicine and the use of a Caesarean sec tion, the chances of a baby becoming in fected can be reduced to 1 percent. HIV may be found in saliva of infected individuals, but it has not been proven that it can be spread through saliva exchange. Also, contrary to common belief, HIV can not be transmitted by toilet seats, tele phones or other related methods. Symptoms of HIV and AIDS can stay dormant for up to one decade or flu-like symptoms can begin within a month or two. Symptoms of HIV include weight and energy loss, short term memory loss and frequent fever and sweating. The defining AIDS symptom is when there are fewer than 200 T- cells, commonly called white blood cells, in each cubic millimeter of blood. When this happens, the body is more susceptible to diseases it would normally have no problem de fending against, such as pneumonia. Such diseases are called opportunistic infections. Common symptoms of op portunistic infections include seizures, See HIV on Page 2. i n 11 \ i v s 11- s r i \ ii ~ Tadau Health For All 21 4 K Braros County . Health Department M, !<►*** * 3 3 Texas A&IV Campus Memor a: Student Center AIDS Services 1702B S Texas Ave. t p.m — 3 p m. Every Thursday from 2 p.m to * n.m.. AIDS Services and Beutel offer tree testing at Brute* RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion Program aims to § prepare teachers Robin Lewis The Battalion Texas A&M’s College of Ed ucation is bringing high school students from across Texas to participate in a summer pro gram designed to prepare them for teaching in elementary and secondary schools. The purpose of this program, which began Sunday and ends Friday, is to help Texas A&M fulfill several goals within the College of Education, one of which is increasing the number of teachers graduating from the University by 3 3 percent during the next five years. The United States Depart ment of Education, it is esti mated that 40 percent of Amer ica’s teachers will retire, while the number of enrolled stu dents will continue to increase. This causes the need for more than 2 million new teachers in the next decade. The Exploring Leadership Opportunities and Rewards in Education (ExpLORE) summer conference is a program that in troduces teacher education pro grams, leadership opportunities, career opportunities and cours es of study to enhance students’ knowledge of teaching. “Basically what we are trying to do is get high school students See Teachers on Page 2. RUBEN DELUNA/THf Battalion Peruvian president asking for U.S. help WASHINGTON (AP) — Peruvian President-elect Ale jandro Toledo told potential investors Tuesday he would support a strong independent judiciary, respect the rule of law and adhere to contracts. He also said his administra tion wanted greater integration of Andean nations and closer ties with South America’s Mer cosur trade group, which groups Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Toledo was in Washington for talks with Secretary of State Colin Powell and other offi cials, heads of international lending organizations and ex ecutives with mining and oth er investments in Peru. After signing a two-part $150 million loan agreement with the World Bank, where he once worked as an economist, Toledo met at the White House with national security adviser Condoleezza Rice. President Bush stopped by the meeting. They discussed Peru’s econ omy, and Toledo said he as sured Bush that Peru would have “a free market with a hu man face. What we said is we iwill manage the economy re sponsibly,” Toledo said, t. During his U.S. and Euro pean trip, which began in New Vork on Monday, Toledo is also s eeking aid for victims of Sat urday’s earthquake in the s outhern part of the country that killed at least 102 people, mjured 1,368 and left 46,470 h omeless. Toledo, 55, who won a June 3* runoff election, said investors should know that political, le gal and economic stability had returned to Peru since the fall oE ex-president Alberto Fuji- m ori’s autocratic regime last November. Addressing the North Amer- ica-Peru Business Council, Toledo said drastic reform of Pe ru’s legal system is needed. “We will establish clear rules of the game to ensure legal sta- bil.ity,” he said. In a globalized economy, he sal d, Peru will adhere to con tra cts with companies willing to invest in the economy. “We will do everything to enaure your investments, ex pand them and comply with the rules of the game,” he said. He said the country’s demo cratic institutions, however, are still fragile and described its economic outlook as delicate. Tax collections are down and economists predict the govern ment is unlikely to meet fiscal targets set by the International Monetary Fund. Investment bankers expect growth to be 0.5 percent this year. Toledo proposed that com panies interested in investing in Peru attend a conference in Lima in October to explore opportunities in road building, agriculture and tourism. Toledo said Monday in New York he would not intervene in the case of Lori Berenson, an American sentenced to 20 years in prison last week after she was convicted of collabo rating with terrorists. The decision came despite pleas by Berenson’s parents for Toledo to pardon her. Bush did not request a par don for Berenson, Toledo said. He said he expressed to Bush “my belief that we should let the judiciary system do its job.” Commission suggests changes for college sports WASHINGTON (AP) — Colleges with low athlete grad uation rates should be banned from postseason play, a com mission said Tuesday in chid ing universities for an empha sis on winning. Player uniforms also would be stripped of corporate logos « We're not in the entertainment business, nor are we a minor league for profes sional sports.” — Theodore Hesburgh president emeritus of Notre Dame and a new coalition would be created to promote tougher ac ademic standards under the plan by the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. “We’re not in the entertain ment business, nor are we a mi nor league for professional sports,” said the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, presi dent emeritus of Notre Dame and commission co-chairman. About 42 percent of men’s basketball players and 48 per cent of football players gradu ate from the major universities, according to the latest NCAA statistics. The rate is lower for the 114 largest basketball pro grams, 34 percent. “Your school is not worthy to be the champion of the country if you’re not educating your kids,” Hesburgh said. The commission wants col leges to graduate at least half the students who play in each sport. Teams with rates lower than that would be barred from conference champi onships and other postseason games. NCAA President Cedric Dempsey said he had reserva tions about the threshold and See Sports on Page 2.