chicken intose >lace in a roisrJPP ,,n ' cream, lemofl * :^Wl\ m i WlVWlW i\ tu: i ri ai; w i i* 'nnay together,: aining ingredia e ov er chicbj -ce evenly. Cot ate overnight, -hicken andsaia ■ I ■’reheat oven: /'El )N'ES 11 AY July 25, 2001 olume 107 ~ Issue 177 6 pages * to roasting par gc tables vou«u. ews in Brief •Merrill usual!: — State jtitoes,quarter: 0rmer director I iced carrots JJ I ... . . ,-r es or until wei akeS ROSltlOn at UT 5 minutesand®USTIN (AP) — Bobby R. In- , that each si r,a ' ' f° rrner director of naval n iwlligence and deputy direc- j or of the Central Intelligence Bncy, has taken a permanent jotition at the LB] School of ^)radveplattertLI)^ Affairs, the University of tomato slices. 'exas-Austin said Tuesday, ervings ■nman will assume the Lyn- KTi B. Johnson Centennial Chair j|)National Policy in August. He /vil teach a core course on pub- Biolicy and conduct research. ■Inman, a 1950 graduate of H spent 31 years in the Navy Id was the first naval intelli- Ince officer to achieve a four- Ir rank. He served as director of naval intelligence from |74 to 1982. ■ In 1983, Inman moved to Istin to become chief execu- leand chairman of Microelec- Inics and Computer Technol ogy Corp. From 1987 to 1990, hp was chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Police plan to press charges against parents of toddler isive ing i a [Line)! h Coupon! eduction sen '90 Tutoring 4746) I DALLAS (AP) — Police said Tuesday they will file a criminal charge against the parents of a toddler who died last month after being left in a hot vehicle. I Michel Borg Jr., who was 23 months old, was left in his fam- i ily'ssport utility vehicle June 3 after an afternoon swim party. 1 1 The child had Down syndrome anda heart condition. 1 The Dallas County medical examiner has ruled the death an accident. Police said they will seek an njury to a child (reckless) I [barge against the parents. Conviction can result in two to J 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000. i Teenager charged for June school fire 08/31/01. I GRAND PRAIRIE (AP) — An -— 18-year-old North Texas man ^ I B 35 t >een arrested and charged . Pith arson for setting fire to a | Brand Prairie middle school ■ l?st month, police said. i Accompanied by his moth- ■ er, David Franklin Smith turned hirnself in to police on Sunday. I Smith was being held on ik for 1/2OFF! the Grand Prairie jail in lieu $'5,000 bail on the arson I wiarge. He also was being held ’ Jin a $2,500 bond for an unre lated assault charge. I The June 27 fire to Lee Mid- •1 die School caused about $6 million in damage. There were no injuries. | Smith faces from 5 to 99 years or life in prison, as well as a maximum $10,000 fine on tge charges. jif Grand Prairie is about 15 miles west of Dallas. the ;e. lance Search committee selected to find Bowen's successor Stuart Hutson The Battalion Cliancellor Howard D. Graves announced Tuesday the members of the advisory com mittee that will conduct a na tional search for die most qual ified candidates for die next president of Texas A&M. Tlie committee is com posed of distinguished profes sors, alumni and one student wlio will file the number of potential candidates down to the few from whom the Board of Regents will select the next president. “We’re looking for an emi nently qualified individual who will be effective in promoting Texas A&M’s interests, leading the academic community, working with the state legisla ture, interacting with the na tional research community, drawing outstanding students representative of the state’s population and maintaining the Texas A&M University tra ditions,” Graves said. Graves said he hopes a new president will be prepared to take office by next June — a deadline that he said means the committee will have to work fast. The members have not yet received directions or a time line of committee meetings, but Dr. Jane Conoley, a mem ber of the committee and dean of the College of Education, said that, judging from past ex periences with similar advisory committees, the group proba bly will need to have a list of vi able candidates by early spring. “We will really have to hit the ground running and start to contact potentials before winter break,” she said. “You have to provide the serious candidates as much time as possible to respond because they are the ones that will take their time and do their home work before they finally de cide whether or not they would consider the job.” Conoley, who is also work ing with the committee in search of candidates for a new vice president of research, said sj^e has no doubts that the committee’s job will be a diffi cult one. She said candidates with the Qualifications to run See Search on Page 2. Presidential Search Advisory Committee • Dr. John Junkins- professor of engineering, chair of the committee • Dr. Perry Adkisson- chancellor emeritus of The Texas A&M University System • Dr. Richard Carlson- professor of geology and geophysics at Texas A&M and speaker of the Faculty Senate • Dr. Jane Conoley- dean of the College of Education at Texas A&M • Dr. F. Albert Cotton- professor of chemistry at Texas A&M, member of the Executive Committee of Distinguished Professors at Texas A&M • Jerry Cox- president and chairman of Cox & Perkins Exploration Inc., member of the Texas A&M University Mays College Development Council • Dr. Jerry Gaston- deputy chancellor of the Texas A&M System • Bobbie Gross- president of the Texas A&M University Association of Professional Support Staff • Schuyler Houser- A&M student body president and an industrial engineering major • Dr. Kevin Jackson- director of student activities at Texas A&M • Dr. Howard B. Kaplan- distinguished professor of sociology at Texas A&M • Dr. Jack Little- retired president and CEO of Shell Oil Company and distinguished alumnus of the College of Engineering and Department of Petroleum Engineering at Texas A&M • Bookman Peters- member of Texas A&M President's Council • Carroll Phillips- A&M Foundation Board of Trustees • Dr. Herbert Richardson- director of the Texas Transportation Institute • Dr. Edgar Sanchez-Sinencio- professor of electrical engineering at Texas A&M • Dr. Marlon Scully- distinguished professor of physics at Texas A&M • Dr. Mardel M. Shepley- associate professor of architecture at Texas A&M • Charles Sippial- vice president for administration at Texas A&M • Dr. Robert Strawser- professor of accounting at Texas A&M • Dr. Max Summers- professor of entomology at Texas A&M • Bob Surovik- president of the Texas A&M Association of Former Students • Dr. Arnold Vedlitz- professor of political science and health policy at Texas A&M • Dr. James E. Womack- distinguished professor of veterinary pathobiology, medical biochemistry, medical genetics, toxicology and genetics at Texas A&M RUBEN DELUNA/7h£ Battalion Monkey roll Joe Shine, an A&M Soccer Camp instructor and a while performing a monkey roll drill. Hundreds of senior speech communications major, and 16-year- soccer players came from across the country this old Brock Bonheim leap over each other Tuesday week to attend the camp. House Judiciary Committee passes human-cloning ban (AP) — The House Judicia ry Committee advanced a bill Tuesday that would prohibit human cloning, following a lengthy debate that also delved into stem cell research. In passing the bill 18-11, law makers said they wanted to keep scientists from applying the same technique on humans that was used to clone Dolly the sheep in 1997. The measure now goes before the full House. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson praised the committee, saying its action puts Congress on the right track toward prohibiting the cloning of human beings. “Supporting medical re search to combat human dis ease and infirmity is immense ly important to this adminis tration,” he said. “However, science does not and cannot proceed in a moral vacuum. The ethical issues posed by human cloning and the impli cations for the child are partic ularly troubling.” But as the cloning bill has moved through the House, a debate has arisen over stem cell research. President Bush will soon de cide whether to permit federal funds for medical research on stem cells pulled from human embryos. Just Monday, Pope John Paul II urged Bush to re ject the idea. As the president has grappled with his decision, so have law makers, including many staunch anti-abortion Republicans. In recent weeks, some — like Sen. Science does not and cannot proceed in a moral vacuum. — Tommy Thompson Health and Human Services Secretary Orrin Hatch of Utah — have announced their support for stem cell research. Tuesday in the House, many Democrats voiced con cern that an outright ban on human cloning would also prohibit stem cell and other types of research. “This may be known as the point in the meeting this morning when we try to play doctor and that’s bad for Amer ican patients,” said Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, the lead ing Democrat on the commit tee. “This would stop ongoing studies designed to help people (that are) suffering.” Republican members said ac tion is needed before science advances to the point where hu mans are cloned. They said the bill only affects human cloning See Cloning on Page 2. Jimmy Carter critical of Bush PLAINS, Ga. (AP) — In a rare instance of one former pres ident criticizing a current one, Jimmy Carter is taking issue with just about everything George W. Bush has done in office. Carter crit icizes Bush CARTER for not pres suring Israel to withdraw from the Gaza Strip, for threatening to abandon the anti-ballistic missile treaty and for not sup porting human rights more strongly. He says Bush has ignored moderates in both parties and calls Bush’s proposed missile de fense shield a “technologically ridiculous” idea that will “re-es- calate the nuclear arms race.” “I have been disappointed in almost everything he has done,” Carter told the Colum bus Ledger-Enquirer in an inter view last week from his home in Plains. Carter also was critical of President Clinton during the fellow Democrat’s administra tion, calling the Monica Lewin sky scandal an embarrassment and disparaging Clinton’s poli cy in North Korea and Haiti. Carter is “a guy with strong views, and I think that’s always been the case,” said presidential scholar Charles Jones of the University of Wisconsin. “What surprises me is a kind of a sweep ing critical analysis, at what has to be said is an early stage.” Carter noted that he had vol unteered to be one of the few Democrats at Bush’s inaugura tion because he was optimistic about the administration. “I hoped that coming out of an uncertain election he would reach out to people of diverse views, not just Democrats and Republicans but others who had different points of view,” Carter said.