if. O IT D Y july 9/2001 alume 107 ~ Issue 167 6 pages ews in Brief Campus ■erg recently iris shooting a Je, the 1963 rorp ./hich starred- ey Hepburn, an Demmewil film, titled Tk irlie, which isd . Wahlbergplj e and Thandie Hepburn's rol( bably won't neans until it I bashed for del r itpart/ thei ineman transfers ?r underwear' 0 Abilene Christian ; er Texas A&M football m 1 s ugi. 2ar ^ ^ as j ost one j ts p| a y ers really not sc ^ dedining to of [ er his i Hther a scholarship. =sKophomore offensive line- , . . Bn Britt Lively says he is trans- t icir \vayint(»j n g to □j v j s j on n Abilene mck-s In slut pljjtjan University to play with ■brother. ■.ively says he was upset that Mas A&M did not sign his Bther and he would prefer to oin him at Abilene Christian ather than remain at A&M. ■However, Lively says he has io ill will toward the A&M foot- ■I staff. ■lively and his brother regis- led at ACU Friday. ■Lively saw action in three ■nes last season, while spend- K the majority of his season ^cking up right guard Taylor litley. Lively's father, Mike Lively, puned football at ACL) and ear ' d all-conference honors as a defensive lineman there. ■ Mike Lively was a member of ACU's 1977 National Champi- ship team. I fall down or[ If it’s not wor er, I’ll just aba •r.” s make for p< nization of t C; it s my wayol 1 to a third I u State Police officer killed in traffic collision I LUBBOCK (AP) — A Lub bock motorcycle patrolman in volved in a traffic collision while escorting a funeral procession last week died from his injuries on Sunday, police said. , Rodney Kendricks, 33, is the first Lubbock officer to die in a ffiotor vehicle accident while on duty, police spokesman Bill EARNER BROS'W 1 ^ 0r 9 an sa 'd- heaters a The officer was injured Mon day when his motorcycle col ints here. Perlii[|jh ec ) with a pickup truck and )0 she got fores-had beep, hospitalized in critical elf was not cbndition at University Medical maybe she vac Center for the past week, e every female 1 Morgan said Kendricks lost for a Hughpftntrol of the motorcycle as he tot. (Grade A- ||ied to move ahead of the pro cession to block traffic, then hit — BethM the oncoming truck. B Kendricks suffered a punc- ■red lung, broken ribs and a ■vere head injury, despite sjBearing a helmet. 1 Kendricks, father of two (laughters, was a 1 2-year veter an of the force. Baylor student wins Miss Texas crown FORT WORTH (AP) — Stacy lames. Miss Lake O' The Pines, was crowned Saturday night as Biss Texas 2001. K James, a recent political sci- Bice major at Baylor University, Will compete this fall in the Miss Bnerica Pageant. (J Her talent was singing, and h^r platform was "Alzheimer's Awareness." H James, 22, of Texarkana, said her biggest accomplishment was graduating from Baylor with honors and being accept ed to law school. >ry •Texas Leaguers hold Texas-sized dreams Opinion :?Jjg| • Conservative students m deserve praise r m for protesting Kyoto Treaty Battalion News Radio: 1:57 p.m. KAMU 90.9 www.thebatt.com Football ticket sales leads to higher hotel room rates Elizabeth Raines The Battalion For the last five years, senior accounting major Daniel Puls’ grandparents, George Jr. and Lafern Puls, have been been making a 50-mile drive for every A&M home football game. They are not coming from home, however, but from their hotel room in Brenham. “They stay in Brenham for two reasons,” Puls said. “One is that it is much cheaper, and two, they have a much easier time getting a room.” Puls said usually they drive up for the day and attend the 12 th Man Foundation lunch and then the game before head ing back to Brenham. Other out-of-town season ticket holders, like the Puls, are having to travel further to find available hotel rooms. Now, with the addition of The Zone, it is getting harder to find rooms. As of June 10, the A&M athletic ticket office said the qular Ramada Inn (College Station) I lilton (College Station) Best Western (Oilloge Station) Super 8 Rates $59 - $70 $119 -$139 $72 general public season ticket orders reached a record high at 34,179. Last year’s record was 30,337. This means that more than 3,000 more people are looking for a place to stay dur ing football game weekends. Cuurinq football season $115: two night minimum $219 - $239 : two night minimum $105: two night minimum $44.95 - $49.95 $64.95 - $69.95 : no mintpium RUBEN DELUNA/rw Batt*pon Puls, who is also an employ ee at the Ramada Inn said that even before the addition of The Zone there were not enough rooms to accommo date everybody. J.B. Garza, guest service agent for the Hilton Hotel and Conference Center and a senior agricultural development major, said that the Hilton has been full since before The Zone. “We could sell our hotel about three times over,” Garza said. “We have so many people that want to stay here during football season that we started taking reservations for the up coming football season a month after last season.” Because of the high demand for rooms during the football Dat Nguyen gives back Mark Passwaters The Battalion Dallas Cowboys linebacker Dat Nguyen, one of the most famous alumni of Texas A&M’s “Wrecking Crew,” returned to College Station on Saturday for an appearance benefiting the Boys and Girls Club of Bryan-College Station. “It’s been a while since I’ve been back (to College Sta tion),” Nguyen said. “This year has gone by fast/’ After struggling with in juries during his first two sea sons in the NFL, Nguyen is expected to anchor the Cow- Cowboys linebacker makes charity appearance Saturday boys defense as the team’s starting middle linebacker. “It’s a great opportunity,” Nguyen said. “That’s the great thing about this. game. If you go out and really work and you have a bad year, you don’t get a second chance ... I’ve been real lucky.” Nguyen scoffed at naysay ers who predict that the Cow boys are in for a rough season. “We’re not rebuilding, we’re reloading. If we stay healthy, we’ll be okay. We still have a lot of players that are as good as anybody,” he said. Nguyen attributed much of the Cowboys’ problems from last year to the injuries that plagued the team for the en tire season. “We never had a chance to get any chemistry as a team,” Nguyen said. “We were never able to get a feel for each other last year. What can you do when you have things happen ing like losing both of your wide receivers (Joey Galloway and Raghib Ismail) for the whole season?” Nguyen said he was happy to be able to come back to College Station and be able to do some thing for underprivileged children. Before signing autographs for an hour, Nguyen talked to a group of children from the Bryan-College Station Boys and Girls Clubs and gave each of them a new pair of tennis shoes. “It’s special to be able to give something back,” Nguyen said. Nguyen remembers his days growing up as the son of Vietnamese refugees in Rock- port and is glad to be in posi tion to help others. “It’s unbelievable to have a chance to help these kids out the way I got helped out,” he said. “Just patting them on the back and telling them ‘hi’ can change some of their lives ... you’re always watched by these kids on TV and some of them idolize you. “I would have been the hap piest kid if (former Baylor and Chicago Bears linebacker) Mike Singletary had said ‘hi’ to me.” Left: Nguyen greets fans after arriving in College Station. Below: Lisa Rowan and her daughter Sybil get a Dallas Cowboys helmet signed by Cowboys linebacker Dat Nguyen Saturday. BERNARDO GARZA/Twe Battalion Supreme Court will decide if paper swapping violates rights LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Alicia Bata needs quick results from a quiz in her Span ish class, she has her students pass their work to classmates and then goes over the answers with them. In a few minutes, she knows who understood the lesson and who did not. “They are paying a lot more attention when they are cor recting each others’ (papers) in the classroom together than if I were,” said Bata, who teaches in Cavalier, N.D. That practice could be in jeopardy because the Supreme Court has agreed to decide if swapping papers to correct them violates students’ priva cy rights. Teachers gathered for the National Education Association convention last week were di vided on the issue. They said they regularly must balance the need to give students timely feedback with the confidential ity of their grades. The issue arose in 1998, when Kristja J. Falvo sued the Owasso, Okla., school district, contending that her three chil dren were embarrassed when classmates graded each other’s work and called out grades to the teacher. A federal judge rejected her claim. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver, however, ruled last year that the grading practice violated the federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act, which prohibits schools from releasing students’ records without par ents’ written consent. Officials with Oklahoma school district and at the NEA say the case raises doubts about many other forms of exhibiting or releasing students’ work. “I think it can be read to cov er any work,” said Michael Simpson, the NEA’s assistant general counsel. He said the case could pro hibit teachers from allowing par ent volunteers to check papers. It could also prevent schools from displaying graded student artwork and science projects. See Papers on Page 2. season, hotels as far as Nava- sota increase their room rates and require a two-night stay minimum. “My dad knows people who travel in from as far as Hous ton to avoid the increased ho tel price and two-night mini mum stay,” said Ramada Inn front desk employee and soph omore history major Katie Othold. Othold said that even though the Ramada Inn fills up one year in advance, they still have peo ple calling for rooms. “We advise people to go to Navasota for the football week ends,” Othold said. “We tell them good luck and suggest to See Hotels on Page 6. Evans' funeral Tuesday Library namesake dies at age 101 Stuart Hutson The Battalion Many students only knew him by the Main-Campus library that bears his name. But Sterling C. Evans, who died 'Thursday from an infection at the age of 101, will be known to many Ag gies as a man who changed the face of the University more than geographically. Evans served as a chairman of the A&M Board of Directors, rt The University has lost a great champion and benefactor in Sterling C. Evans.” — Dr. Ray M. Bowen A&M president the precursor to the Board of Re gents, in the ’60s, where he was instrumental to the admission of women to A&M and the end of mandatory military training. “The University has. lost a great champion and benefactor in Sterling C. Evans,” said A&M President Dr. Ray M. Bowen. “He had vision and de termination in his quest to make Texas A&M what it is to day. We will miss him and his indomitable spirit.” Since retiring from the Board of Directors, Evans and his wife have donated more than $10 million to the University, much of which was specifically target ed at A&M’s library system. Evans’ last visit to the campus was last October, when he cut the ribbon on the newly reno vated Sterling C. Evans Library. “He was the heart and soul of this library,” said Dr. Fred Headi, dean and director of the A&M li brary system. “It was a glorious moment last fall when he cut the ribbon at the renovated Evans Library. We were looking for ward to his 102 nd birthday in Au gust. We plan to unveil a new portrait of him this fall for the University’s 125th anniversary.” Evans graduated at the top of his class from A&M in 1921 with a degree in animal hus bandry. He went on to make his fortune in real estate. Among his many estates was his resi dence — a 20,000-acre ranch that he donated to A&M. See Evans on Page 6.