Monday, J t July 3, 2001 Volume 107 ~ Issue 165 6 pages News in Brief najor, rideTtii ase State Newspaper carrier shot while working | DALLAS (AP) — A 40-year- old newspaper carrier for The Dallas Morning News was shot - and killed while making deliv eries early Sunday, police said. Randall Clay Borders was fill- png a newspaper box outside a laundry in the Oak Cliff neigh- orhood of Dallas when he as shot in a parking lot. Witnesses said the gunmen fled the scene in a 1980s brown or red Oldsmobile Cut lass with tinted windows. Investigators said the slay ing may have been the result of robbery. Newspaper officials aid Borders often filled in on wo routes but did not have a regular delivery route. Smoke from marsh jfire shrouds bay TEXAS CITY (AP) — Monday .•losures'l g 0 t off to a smoky start on the ■western shore of Galveston Bay. A lightning strike Sunday af ternoon was blamed for ignit ing a marsh fire that burned all night and into Monday morn ing on Goat Island in East Bay, just north of the Bolivar Penin sula, the National Weather Ser vice said. Smoke from the remote fire is drifting west, shrouding the western shores from Bayou Vista and Texas City, north to Dickinson, League City and Clear Lake. Visibility also is re duced in the Houston Ship Channel. The island is accessible only by boat, officials said, so fire fighters are going to have to let the fire burn itself out. They were hoping for help from scattered showers and thun derstorms predicted for the area Monday afternoon. ion and moden'lj uld help thestatf l ivmatu re, shear ipletes itsstraK i military, lent s budget is dj to the bases tk ^ core responsihir | ink in this year! I 1 J| Id signified^ to I exas,” HutcfaisB s another EC Ji food shape, ence has4* urminshipc ipropriatioiKSife ns lost their:/ e has a good®' ic Feinstein, D-L .hair, and saidtb views on the is® f terry, a memberr res Committee,d construction at] i harder to scrap (-Clarendon, sad dd Rumsfeld sfcr- co mini ttee per V has too mucli Nation ;ete< ano ese Foreign d Hammoudv uifirmed “Israel nature” and cai ed Nations to Israeli airstrip national televtf ro, Arab Leapt eneral Amr' led the airstrib ded “a darkitt- levelopmertfC raeli Cabinet^ t in Jerusalem 1 ■ station was al because Syria* for Friday’s He- raid that wound ddiers in the( gion. criminal act)' 1 h takes placeuh ition of Syria] as a preset 1 the Staten^ / said it “wilin' bollah attacks, illah has pled! fighting Israel 1 ne Chebaa Fari] erritory is part 1 eights, whicS from Syria. H‘ ! d Lebanon eld mgs to Leband Napster goes offline SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Napster's song-sharing service 'as offline Monday as it worked to transform itself into a music company for paying customers. Napster did not say when its computer servers would come back online, and it was not clear exactly how the down time related to Napster's planned launch of a subscrip tion service, promised for later this summer. The company has also been upgrading its music-identifica tion system to better comply with court orders that it pre vent unauthorized music swapping. Napster representatives did not immediately return calls for comment. The service was sued by ma jor record companies for copy right infringement for allowing computer users to swap songs for free. As a result, it is trans forming itself into a fee-based system that will pay royalties to the artists. INSIDE Battalion News Radio: 1:57 p.m. KAMU 90.9 www.thebatt.com Men at work BERNARDO GARZA/The Battalion Alejandro Rocha coats newly-painted lines along George Bush Drive with high way safety spheres, or small spherical shards of glass as Jose Mendoza paints the lines. The glass acts as a reflective medium for driving at night. Merchants .- 4 .. . - -»• upset about construction Elizabeth Raines The Battalion For John Raney, owner of the Texas Aggie Bookstore and member of the Northgate Mer chants Association, the renova tions currently taking place at Northgate may be doing more harm than good. The city is currently renovat ing Church Street, an action that Raney said needs to be done. The problem, he said, is that along with the renovations comes the removal of all the short-term parking available on Church Street. “Short-term parking is the life blood of retailers and we [the retail merchants] are tremen dously effected by the removal of short-term parking,” Raney said. “Our daily sales have al ready greatly suffered by the re moval of quick parking.” Raney said that with the re moval of short-term parking on Church Street, the merchants on Northgate will be surround ed by three high-speed streets. He said that when the mer chants went to the city about the situation five years ago, and were told they would still make mon ey from foot traffic by Texas A&M students living on North- side. Raney said this is not so. “We don’t get as many people walking across the street as we did 25 years ago,” Raney said. “Who wants to cross six lanes of 40 to 45 mile per hour traffic?” Despite merchants’ com plaints, Church Street will be under construction for the next four months. The city of Col lege Station is renovating in sec tions and hopes to have it com pleted by Nov. 8. The renovations have already begun at the Wellborn Road in tersection and will continue to Church Street’s intersection with College Main. Although city representatives could not immediately be reached for comment regarding the short-term parking situa tion, Bob Mosely, engineer for the city of College Station, said there are many benefits from the renovations. “Church Street is the main east-west artery through North- gate,” Mosely said. “It should be a nice improvement to the Northgate area and improve the traffic flow.” Mosely said the city has been able to complete the work through federal community development grant money. The renovations include repaving the 28-foot street and 6-foot sidewalks. The side walks will also be colored and stamped to look like brick. See Road on Page 2. Aggies to Robin Lewis The Battalion The 2,300-mile trip from Chicago to Palm Springs, Calif, may be a pleasant, cross country trip to some, hut for the Texas A&M Solar Power Motor Sports Team, it is a chance to prove how bright they are — as long as the sun stays bright too. The team w ill enter Acala, a solar-powered car named after the Japanese god of fire, in the 2001 American Solar Challenge on July 15. Acala, designed by A&M engineering stu dents, has a carbon-fiber body and is covered with 2,640 solar cells that will propel the car across the country. The car is po wered only by the cells that convert the energy from sunlight to elec tricity. The pow r er is then delivered to the batteries where the energy is stored for use by the car. “The maximum energy you can get from the sun is 1,000 watts, and that’s about how much it takes to run your hair dryer,” said race solar car across U.S. Dr. Dennis G. Waugaman, faculty advisor for the team. “So you don’t have very much power to glide this 700-pound car across the country.” He said this project is primarily for educa tional purposes, although a lot of the students dedicate their time because they find it fun to be involved. “This (project) is 99 percent students,” Waugaman said. Waugaman said the engineering depart ment has incorporated this project into some of their courses and students may even get credit for their senior projects. Although corporations and former stu dents sponsor the team, Waugaman said rais ing money has been the hardest part of this $1 million project. Waugaman also said it is a challenge to get the car from one city to another, much less cross-country without a breakdown. See Solar on Page 2. KRISTI HINES/Th£ Battalion Mark Ellis, a recent graduate, works on putting the final touches on the Solar Power Motor Sports Team's solar car, Acala. The team will race the car in the 2001 American Solar Challenge, which begins on july 1 5 in Chicago. I ' . . ; • Local officials oppose proposed bombing range in South Texas SARITA, Texas (.AP) — Local lead ers and environmental groups on Mon day urged Secretary of the Navy Gor don England to end consideration of the Laguna Madre area as a possible mili tary bombing and tra ining site. Kenedy County Commissioners vot ed unanimously to oppose the idea after hearing from Texas A&M professor Timothy Fulbright, who has studied the inland ecosystems for decades. Fulbright told the commissioners that the land was critical habitat for wildlife. He said 80 percent of all red-head ducks in the Western Elemisphere win ter in the area and 50 percent of all fish caught along the Texas Coast originate in the Laguna Madre. The ecosystem is eve n more delicate inland, Fulbright said, with grasses and groves of mesquite trees the result of long and careful tending. He said disturbing the thin layer of clay below the sand wou Id cause fauna to disappear into the porous sand. “It’s not that we don’t like the mili tary,” said County Commissioner Tobin Armstrong, a 7 7-year-old World War II veteran. “We’re all patriots. We love this country. I’ve been ranching it success fully. There ain’t nothing you can do ex cept raise livestock and support wildlife.” Located in the middle of a sparsely populated stretch of sandy coastal plains, Sarita is the closest settlement to It's not that we don't like the military. We're all patriots.” — Tobin Armstrong Kenedy County Commissioner what 49-year-old civil engineer Patrick Veteto, a Marine Corps veteran, has suggested as a possible site for military training. The possibility of using 220,000 acres just east of Sarita for practice bombing is one plan being considered as an alter native for training now done on Vieques Island in Puerto Rico. That agreement ends in May 2003. The plan suggested for South Texas would also have Navy troops use Padre Island, a narrow barrier island that runs along the coast, to practice amphibious assault landings. Navy officials hyve said it is too pre liminary to comment on the plan. Since news of the plan broke, the public outcry along the coast has been more substantial than anything in Arm strong’s memory. “There are more people today than I have ever seen. There was not one per son in favor,” Armstrong said. About 100 people attended the meeting. Kenedy County’s population is slightly more than 400. Supporters are promoting it as an economic development plan, said County Judge J. A. Garcia Jr. “Studies show it would have just the adverse impact,” Garcia said. He said practice bombing could harm the oil and gas industry as well as the catde industry. “There’s also eco-tourism, the recre ation impact, which is tremendously See Texas on Page 2. Pieces of spy plane head home WASHINGTON (AP) — Exactly three months after the U.S. Navy EP- 3E spy plane made an emergency land ing on China’s Hainan island, it began returning in pieces to U.S. custody, of ficials said Monday. Parts of die dismantled aircraft were flown aboard a Russian-designed cargo plane to Kadena Air Base on the Japan ese island of Okinawa on Sunday. The cargo plane is to make a final flight with the EP-3E’s stripped-down fuselage on Wednesday U.S. Pacific Command spokesman Maj. Sean Gibson said. The EP-3E was part of an electronic surveillance group based at Kadena. Its return in pieces will mark an end to an episode that put severe strain on the United States-China relationship. Vice President Dick Cheney said “the jury’s out” on w hether the United States and China can forge stronger bonds. “We’re not enemies at this point, See Plane on Page 2.