. Jea. ohn Andrews ad guilty—w sentence—h 2 boys more ected to testify—^ ,r Mondayoj11 ws | n BHef July 11, 2001 me 107 ~ Issue 169 6 pages classes for chi': Catholic Chun: )rth of Boston, rs YMCA Sun s said he used )c friend hot’s k ecords, police : azen pornogra: nude children. >ys from Rearc hurch. State nsive ring ha (Line)! fhh Coupon' ;o.mt.C09M ■ reduction jusen '90 o Tutoring M746) aduate donates ■ miilion to UT ,0STIN (AP) — A $25 mil- cf nation from a retired aspil man and his late wife fjelp create a School of sJences at the University of is-, ustin, the university an- ■ed Tuesday, hi school will be named for H Bi. and Katherine Jackson, ff Have already given UT $15 —ion to expand the geologi- iciences building, i Hdents who study geo- ■es are currently scattered mahout the Dpartment of dagical Sciences, the Bu- Hf Economic Geology and Institute for Geophysics. J H new school will pull to- Hr students under one f. Borne of the money also | H used to help support re- " H and fellowships. 'My education at UT-Austin 1 Hd launch and sustain my IH," said Jackson, a 1940 1 H^y graduate. "Now, I ntto help others get the best jeation possible." ttens given away S not have rabies LANCASTER (AP) — All six of ■’1 s kittens a family gave away a parking lot in Lancaster last jek have tested negative for Pies, police said Monday. The family who gave the ttens away July 2 kept one tat was sick, and that kitten ested positive for rabies on 'ednesday. Rabies can be transmitted by UBorwhen saliva from an in- i ’ted animal enters a person's ] 1A series of extensive post- i )osure shots can prevent ra- sfirom developing. But once I Btoms develop, the disease . Bally fatal. J |— Nation iiw Orleans lifts jn on bottles, cans )N I ||W ORLEANS (AP) — The ,Basy is on the verge of : ;ing out a 29-yeAr ban on >lic drinking from bottles i [i ans - . [he city council last week |B to suspend the law. The £ ■ sal will take effect once it is |ptJ by Mayor Marc Morial, said he supports the drink for 1/2 OFF n ge. •xp. 08/31/01. J Iritics of the open contain- Ijp have long said that po- ! enforce it mainly as an ex- . — t< > stop and search blacks. irly 80 percent of those . . —-irged with violating the or ifice are black, according to |®y released last month by j-ial's office. IHush to change the law jll in earnest in November black man stopped for iyidg an open can of beer glgflCG fatally shot by four police :ers. Police said the man || gun, but family mem- ; said he was unarmed. ot the vice. otation alignment 8575 • Baseball season hits midpoint, players' chance to lo€»k forward B-Q ! Card .J ittalion News Radio: >7 p.m. KAMU 90.9 ww.thebatt.com Aggie recovering after crash Senior in fair condition after landing single-engine plane infield Stuart Hutson The Battalion An A&M student who was stranded for more than five hours Monday after crash landing a single-engined plane in an 1,800-acre ranch remains in fair con dition at Scott & White Hospital in Temple. Jefferson Randolph Keith, a senior agricultural business major, is being treated for dehydration and other minor injuries sustained when the plane failed to restart while Keith was practicing stalling maneuvers. A representative of the Federal Avia tion Administration (FAA) said the plane, which belongs to the A&M Fly ing Club, crashed on the G Bar Ranch approximately 13 miles southwest of College Station. Department of Public Safety Troop er Mark Melson said the plane was trav eling about 70 miles per hour when it landed on the ranch at 6:30 a.m. The force of the impact broke the plane’s landing gear. Keith then waited with the plane for five hours, hoping that the plane’s emer gency beacon would lead emergency crews to the crash site. The beacon ap parently was not operational. Keith then walked half a mile before he encountered a railroad worker who shuttled him to the Somerville train de pot. Keith was then taken to St. Joseph Regional Health Center in Bryan and was later transferred to Scott & White. Hospital spokespersons declined to comment on the specifics of Keith’s in juries or on how long he is expected to remain under the hospital’s care. Melson said the plane will stay at the crash site while the incident remains un der investigation by the FAA, who took their first look at the crash site Tuesday morning. Melson said that, after the FAA has completed its investigation, the plane will most likely be handed over to the National Traffic Safety Board for an ex amination of what prevented the plane from restarting. Scott & White spokespersons said Keith has declined to comment and rep resentatives of the flight club could not be reached for comment. Ready, aim ... fire STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion Amia Esechie (foreground), a- senior biomedical major, and Hannah Grasso, a senior computer science major, take aim at paper targets before releasing their arrows during a beginning archery class at the Student Recreation Center Tuesday. Administrator named to NASA Advisory Council Justin Smith The Battalion Vice President for Research at Texas A&M, Dr. Richard E. Ewing, has recently been an nounced as a member of the NASA Advisory Council (NAC). The NAC is the group NASA uses to examine its pro grams and make suggestions to the NASA administrator about those programs. “I look forward to serving on the council. It is a great honor to be asked to participate in set ting the direction for future space research and explo ration,” Ewing said. The NAC was formed in 1977 when NASA combined the Space Program Advisory Council with the Research and Technology Council. It is now the most senior advising body for NASA. Members of the NAC are selected from a list containing the names of people who are in the top of their fields, which range from science to medicine. “The NAC looks for people with varying degrees of expert ise in different areas and still have broad perspectives,” said Mike Green, staff director of the NAC. Ewing was recommended by the Texas Congressional Dele gation, specifically Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. “Ewing was chosen because he has a sharp, narrow focus when it is needed, but can also see the broad picture,” Green said. The 26-member council meets once every quarter for two days. During those two days, NASA displays all of its current projects and policies and also the ideas it is consider ing for future projects. The council then makes rec ommendations to the NASA administrator about what direc tion the programs should take and how to make them work at optimum efficiency. Prior to being Vice Presi dent of Research, Ewing was the dean of the College of Sci ence and a distinguished pro fessor of mathematics. At A&M, he also helped form and direct the Institute of Scientif ic Computation and the Acad emy for Advanced Telecom munications and Learning Technologies. Ewing is a member of the board of directors for the Na tional Space Biomedical Re search Institute. He also holds the Mobil Technology Compa ny Endowed Chair in computa tional science. Mexico warning of border crossings MEXICO CITY (AP) — “Don’t take the risk.” “Think hard about it.” Those were among the videotaped warnings Mexico began running Tuesday on U.S. border-bound buses, hoping to stem a growing tide of migrant deaths. The advertisements, which debuted on more than 5,200 buses heading toward the bor der, focus on the perils of bor der-crossing, which include We want to inundate Mexico with the message.” — Juan Hernandez head of Office for Mexicans Abroad treacherous terrain, scorcliing desert and immigrant smugglers who sometimes abandon mi grants to die. The message in some is blunt: “Don’t go.” “We want to inundate Mexi co with the message,” said Juan Hernandez, head of President Vincente Fox’s Office for Mexi cans Abroad, at a news confer ence where he unveiled the four new video advertisements. Mexico’s government says 491 Mexicans died trying to cross the border last year. More than 160 have died so far this year — including 14 migrants whose bodies were found in late May in the Arizona desert. The advertisements offer grim warnings of death and ill ness to discourage illegal immi gration — while encouraging those who do make the journey to send money back home. “The border today is very dangerous,” Hernandez says on one of the spots, which show scenes of migrants slipping through a tunnel and border fences marked with crosses me morializing those who have died. See Mexico on Page 2. Japanese committee demands review TOKYO (AP) — Angered by U.S. delays in handing over an American serviceman suspected of rape, a parlia mentary committee on Tuesday adopt ed a resolution demanding a review of the agreement governing U.S. troops in Japan. The resolution, passed by the lower house foreign affairs committee, criti cized the U.S. military for failing to pre vent crimes by troops stationed in Japan and demanded measures to ensure the swift handover of U.S. servicemen ac cused of crimes. The committee’s decision comes less than a week after the United States agreed to relinquish custody of Air Force Staff Sgt. Timothy Woodland to Japan- Resolution criticizes military for failing to prevent crimes by troops in Okinawa ese police on Okinawa. Woodland was arrested last Friday on suspicion of rap ing a 20-year-old woman on April 29 outside a bar. He has denied the charges. Japanese police were allowed to ques tion Woodland immediately after the al leged assault. But U.S. officials resisted giving local police full custody of Wood land for four days because of concerns about his legal defense under Japan’s criminal justice system. In Japan, more than 95 percent of suspects whose cases go to trial are convicted. In its resolution, the committee said tfte delays kindled animosity and distrust among Japanese people living in Oki nawa toward U.S. troops. “Improvements must be made to the agreement that would speed the transfer of custody,” the committee said. Some 26,000 U.S. troops are sta tioned on the southern island of Oki nawa. Residents have long expressed concerns over crowding, military-relat ed accidents and crimes committed by U.S. servicemen. Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has indicated he wants to find ways to make the existing Status of Forces Agreement between Japan and the United States work better, instead of revising the pact. He said changing the agreement would take time and must be part of broader talks involving U.S. bases elsewhere, in cluding South Korea and Gennany. Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka told the lower house committee Tuesday that the two countries have discussed the pos sibility of changes in the past. “Japan and the U.S. have agreed to abide by the agreement. Both sides are doing their best to reduce the burden of hosting U.S. troops shouldered by the people of Okinawa,” she said, with out elaborating.