J .XC'.J /-.V X June 28, 2001 iume 107 ~ Issue 163 6 pages wvs in Brief Campus EVA Tw BAnuic* ionservation j86 and was e it is being then jicials warning rnational Ags uition, fee scam xas A&M officials have notified of a scam involv- hdividuals promising po- tfil international students /er fees and tuition rates at K/1. The individuals, who m to be affiliated with the v< rsity, may collect $6,000 ■ore from victims, labile we are currently are of this in connection ■ Pakistan, it also could in- d< students from other ar- I of the world," said sinne Droleskey, executive ector of International Pro- Bis for Students. ■roleskey said currently en- lle I or potential interna- ftl students should contact international Student Ser- |s Office by email at i>tamu.edu to authenticate individual claiming to be ated with the University. State irents would i thumbtack an sentenced in nimal cruelty case MAN ANTONIO (AP) — A ccording to econd man accused of set- iworkeronfc in 9 a cat on fire earlier this en handcuir earw iH spend seven months lishmentf 1 ) a '' an( ^ P a V a ^ ne in ase a judge called "coward- /and despicable." Punishment for Brian Tarv- -ncame Tuesday. He showed chherwk; 10 visib|e reaction when udye Wayne Christian read said the t: hispentence. nd blister; • A six-member jury on Mon- Id a doctor; lay convicted Tarver, 19, on a s of her feed lisdemeanor charge of cruel- ndcuffed. ' to animals. Tarver must also mistreatingtl a y a J4,000 fine for helping icipline her,k# 1 a cat on fire, she was disoirtf arver ancl his co-defen- iprobleracylf' K ® n , ne1;h Matt / were ac ' jg Bd of dousing the cat with Pmable liquid and igniting Banimal with a cigarette ■er on Jan. 23 at a San An- 1^1 Q ffj" 1 ! 0 apartment complex. Ofrnily sues course tO te /er boy who was evolution and'j ruck by lightning raOUSTON (AP) — Thefam- d that he neve: of a boy struck by lightning tended to be or|le playing golf is suing the tied money.Btjf course, alleging the injury at Trofimoit ,u 'd not have happened had t was a coinciif L° urse installed lightning ible to name!# 1 '® 0 equipment. .henshowTiJ lndrose 5 ol [ Club in erFBIagentpl 9 °P ened abo ^ three ,■ . 5 ars a go and should have 'l 1 <>inat- fehe equipment, especial- :man Mark s iJ, ce Houston is prone to e vote wasn-yere lightning storms, said ed Trofimofi n favormina, the family's dewing a videVyjer. bribing his siMiristopher Brehm, then )eliberations^ |uffered a severe, perma- irs. U brain injury when he ink someone' 5 hit by lightning while ” King saidfo^ 11 '9 9 olf on Au 9- 2000 / let. “Heclai/j mina said - can, that he - or die pastel someone W\ i the countn became a l-| joined the $ as honorabk ee years late a civilian in-1 in 1959. INSIDE Aggielife • Reel Critique The Fast mul the Furious reviewed : NBA to o 1 :ies in ball nge shooting dace of Ala if Houston k 1 d their fres entirely, i the flurry of; e. 'The only Draft is that science, te ley have a si iey can do is n the Clipped (ie/ Balhoffisi journalisin' ww.thebatt.com Admissions to implement quicker^ paperless process Elizabeth Raines The Battalion Most Texas A&M students probably remember the anxiety that accompanies waiting for an official acceptance letter. To shorten the wait, officials at A&M have decided to implement a new paper less system that will speed up the applica tion process and decrease response time. Director of Information Technology for the Office of Admissions and Records Monique Snowden said that, in the past, the A&M Office of Admissions and Records has used paper files to review student applications. She said it was an unduly slow process, and die implemen tation of the new paperless imaging sys tem will speed up the process by weeks. The $2 million Document Imaging and Workflow System (DIWS) will be implemented this fall as a joint effort be tween the Office of Admissions and Records and the Department of Finan cial Aid. The DIWS, created by BCS Systems of Houston, is designed to put all student application documents and student fi nancial aid documents online. Snowden said the new imaging sys tem is replacing the physical filing sys tem with a Web-based system. She §aid that although the students files will be online, the security will be very high, and access will be limited. “Even though this system has a Web interface, it is not accessible to just any one,” Snowden said. “[The system] is highly secure and behind many firewalls.” The DIWS will be implemented in four phases during the next year and a half. T he first phase, which will begin Fall 2001, will consist of transferring the freshman application and financial aid files from a paper document to a Web- based document. The second phase, scheduled to begin Spring 2002, will convert all other current student files into microfilm that can be viewed on the new system. Phase three will consist of implementing phases one and two for the Corps of Cadets, A&M Honors Pro gram and graduate programs. Phase four See Admissions on Page 6. IMPLEMENTING P'a p'eVd'cVsJa'’d rffis’s I’o' nfs’^’s t eTrii m PHASE Freshman application and financial aid files transferred from paper to electronic format PHASI Convert all other student files to microfilm PHASI Phases 1 and 2 applied to Corps of Cadets lilimi Phases 1 and 2 applied to Texas A&M- Galveston RUBEN DfLUNA/7h£ Battalion Fish camp preparations JP BEATO/77y£ Battalion Fish Camp counselors for Camp Smith paint a banner in the hallway of the Langford Architecture Center Wednesday. Counselors for Camp Smith meet every Wednesday during the summer to prepare for camp which begins August 7 and runs through August 25. Future teachers explore program Robin Lewis The Battalion UH selects new police chief HOUSTON (AP) — A new University of Houston police chief has been named to re place the man who contends he was fired last year for press ing criminal charges against a UH football player. Robert B. Wilson Jr., former police chief at the University of Utah and three other higher education institutions, will take over on July 23 as police chief. George Hess said he was ter minated on Nov. 8, one week af ter Cougars player Mike DeR- ouselle was found guilty of forg ing a government document — a diird-degree felony— and giv en a four-year prison sentence. Since Hess was fired, John Martin — UH associate vice president of administration — has served as interim police chief. From the beginning of his police career as an officer in Oakland, Calif., in 1964, Wil son has more than 30 years of experience in law enforcement, according to a prepared state ment. Wilson chairs the Salt Lake Regional Gang Task Force in Utah and is regional chair of the University Police Section of the International As sociation of Chiefs of Police. A starting defensive tackle, DeRouselle was convicted in 1999 of forging the signature of an athletic department co ordinator on a book requisi tion form and then selling the books for cash. Hess, 60, claimed publicly that he was fired for not cooperating with the university’s desire to keep the matter “in house.” A letter of termination pro vided by Fless indicated his crit icism of the administration over the DeRouselle case played a role in his dismissal. But Arthur Smith, UH president, has called Hess’ charges the prod uct of a series of “unsubstanti ated allegations by disgruntled employees.” The desks are only knee-high, the bathrooms are unfit for the average adult and the majority of the people walking around are less than 4 feet tall. These are the students of Southwood Valley Elementary where the Texas A&M summer camp, Exploring Leadership Opportunities and Reward in Education (ExpLORE), spent Wednesday morning observing the daily routines of an ele mentary class. The A&M College of Edu cation is hosting ExpLORE in support of the Texas Education Agency’s attempts to recruit high school students into the field of education. The reason for the visit to Southwood Val ley Elementary was to give these high school students a glimpse into the work of an el ementary school teacher. The high school students sat and watched the interaction be tween the elementary students and the teachers, absorbing the learning process firsthand. “It was the kids that actually motivated me,” said Ivan Gal van, a 16-year-old high school junior from Brownsville. Galvan is a kickball coach for a pee wee league in Brownsville, and he said he loves interacting with kids. See Teachers on Page 6. Funerals held for five drowned children HOUSTON (AP) — Russell Yates found it hard to say goodbye. Wandering around the tiny white cas kets holding the bodies of his slain chil dren, the proud father talked about his four sons and daughter for 50 minutes Wednesday before realizing he had pre pared some notes. “I wrote all this down on a card and there’s not much left,” he said. “I’m go ing to miss these kids.” Then he carefully tucked a favorite blanket next to each child before closing each casket. “Noah gave his to Mary, but I remem ber it with him,” Yates said as he placed the ragged, white baby blanket with his oldest son, who was 7. A new, pink blan ket went in with 6-month-old Mary. “I’m sorry I didn’t get to see you grow up,” he told the lifeless child, who re sembled a doll, as he wept. Yates followed his five children to a nearby cemetery, where he again cried as he tapped on each of the caskets to end a 10-minute burial service. Calling the eulogies “the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do,” Yates ad dressed about 300 mourners at the Clear Lake Church of Christ, just a few blocks from the home where their mother allegedly drowned them in a Ft The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away. That's exactly what he's done. He gave me all these children, and now he's taken them away.’’ — Russell Yates victims' father tub following a long struggle with post partum depression. “I can’t possibly tell you everything there is to know about each one of them,” Yates said. “But I can give you a glimpse of who they were.” Mary was dressed in a pink sleeper. Her 3-year-old brother Paul was to her left and 2-year-old Luke to her right. Noah wore a multicolored sweater em blazoned with a truck. John, 5, wore an orange and black sweater. He described Noah as intelligent, in dependent and a lover of bugs; John rough and tumble with a great smile; Paid the most well-behaved; Luke the troublemaker, the one most likely to challenge boundaries; and Mary, the “princess” of the family. “The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away,” Yates said. “That’s exactly what he’s done. He gave me all these children, and now he’s taken them away. “I was sitting at the dinner table the other night telling stories and that’s how I would like to tell you,” he said. “I tell you every minute I had I was with them. It wasn’t like they were just some gener ic children that happened to be mine. They were my friends.” He went to each casket, pausing be fore it as a picture of the child appeared on a large projection screen behind and above him. “That’s him,” Yates said, pointing to the image of Noah. A tear fell from the father’s eye. Noah once caught a caterpillar that became a butterfly when the family was on a road trip, Yates recalled. The fami ly quickly stopped on the side of the road and freed the butterfly as it emerged from the cocoon. Yates gazed down at Noah’s casket: “That is kind of how I look at this. We’ve set you free.” While discussing Mary, he said could n’t believe his wife, Andrea, bore a girl. “I thought boys were all we’d ever have,” he said. “I told her I wanted a basketball team first, then we’d talk about girls.” But over the last six months, Yates said Mary became his little princess. “Given this tragedy, I am so glad I had a girl,” he said. Posters covered with pictures of the children lined a table in a church hallway. One picture showed a smiling Noah in the bathtub with sections of wet hair sticking up. See Children on Page 2.