V Thursday, J t ia itizen mvki professor c arrived bac ource oftot of State Cot- > was reunited ig in San Frr. glad to be k govemmen;: 1 City I'nivet: met with Stat linutes and«.-! •ovide detaib t TorriceED- 1 n Thursdav. lars have dire,:: nd. Both side'' April 1 colt gn minister, t s case. He al i several cases i\v, that these:: ^han, an.ta u ho has taut is week to It 1 M C X'Z/ A Y July 30, 2001 Volume 107 ~ Issue 179 6 pages News tn Brief"" Campus Extension Service getting new name The Board of Regents ap proved Friday a proposal to change the name of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service to the Texas Cooperative Ex tension. "The new name ties the agency's roots to the broader services it currently offers and will offer in the future," said Chancellor Howard D. Graves. "Our hope is that more Texans will take advantage of the vari ety of programs and services Javailable through extension." The Extension Service is a [joint federal- and state-spon sored organization that offers outreach programs and con- [tinuing education services to Texans. Ed Hiler, director of the Extension Service, cited its. commitment to servicing ur ban as well as highly agricul turally based communities as part of the motivation for the name change. Nation IIM forward: ckers. orting doesn't get off in this ^ Carter, executi'i ie Assistant iforcementrf ed to registetf onvicts. to have to tail rado Springs | L “We don’t mv precaution Steam engine kills ■ four in explosion MEDINA, Ohio (AP) — A steam engine exploded at a | county fair Sunday, killing four I people and injuring dozens ■ when it blasted shrapnel and hot oil across the fairgrounds. The engine was being moved into place for an out door exhibit about antique trains and tractors when it ex ploded at about 6:30 p.m., Medina County Sheriff Neil Hassinger said. Two of the men killed were close to the engine, and the third man was found 30 feet away. A fourth person died later at a hospital. Shrapnel was found in a parking lot about 100 yards away, said Fire Chief Bill Herthneck. Last year, about 30 people who attended the fair or a lat er Halloween attraction called the Carnival of Horrors at the Medina County Fairgrounds became ill with potentially deadly E. coli. A report from the federal Centers for Dis ease Control and Prevention suggested that water and ice used by food vendors may have become contaminated with standing water from the animal barns. Apartment explodes, injuring at least 7 EMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — An explosion and fire destroyed a building with five apartments on Sunday, killing one person and injuring seven. Another person was missing. At least one woman was een jumping from a second- story apartment as flames roared through the roof. Wit nesses also reported hearing a loud blast followed quickly by a fire. INSIDE ¥ UJr JM l&KA m I k’/ 1’J 11 i'i i < Construction set to begin on West Campus garage Stuart Hutson The Battalion After years of planning, construction will begin on the West Campus parking garage in one month -— just in time to be an inconvenience to the thousands of students flocking to A&M this fall. The Texas A&M System Board of Regents awarded the $40 million garage construc tion contract to J.T Vaughn Construction Co. Inc., of Houston during its meeting Thursday. The parking garage, which was first p’roposed in 1998, will occupy an area now taken up by 1,000 parking spaces north of the Student Recreation Center. The six-story garage will of fer at least 3,190 spaces — suf ficient parking space for three high-occupancy facilities: the Student Rec Center, Reed Arena and Kyle Field. The project will include a pedestrian walkway connect ing main and West campuses via an underground tunnel beneath Wellborn Road. The walkway, which will begin at the garage and extend to Kyle Field, will replace “the rain bow” archway near Joe Routt Boulevard. The archway, which does not meet with Americans with Disabilities Act requirements, will be torn down at the beginning of Fall 2001. Tony Heger, director of the Texas A&M System Facilities Administration Division, said the construction should last approximately 21 months but will be designed so as to cause as little disruption as possible. “President Bowen made a point to express to the com mittee how much possible dis ruption this construction may cause during football season. This is going to be happening for two years, so it is going to cause some problems for two seasons,” he said. “However, one of the winning points of the contractor who was cho sen was his ability to schedule phases of construction so that they interfere as little as pos sible. “He has been doing great work with the medical center in Houston where he has been Helping hand STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion Andrianne Lewis of Brazos Valley Golden Retriever Rescue comforts Jada, a two-year-old retriever, while she is dried at a dog washing fundraiser Saturday. The group rescues golden retrievers that have been aban doned or mistreated and finds loving homes for them. Jada was rescued after being shot with a pellet gun. Officials alarmed by worm Government, businesses try to protect against 'Code Red’ WASHINGTON (AP) — In an un precedented show of force against an ex tremely virulent Internet attack, govern ment and private officials on Monday will implore worldwide organizations to protect themselves from the “Code Red” worm. Representatives from the White House, FBI, Microsoft and others have decided to take the step in the face of one of the largest ever dangers to the Internet. The worm, similar to a virus, could cause widespread slowdowns and sporadic outages. “The Internet has become indispensible to our national security and economic well being,” said Ron Dick, head of the Nation al Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC), an arm of the FBI. “Worms like Code Red pose a distinct threat to the Internet.” Along with posting various warnings on their Websites, government officials and representatives from Microsoft were hold ing a news conference Monday afternoon to publicize their efforts. The government routinely works with private companies to issue warnings about new hack attacks and viruses, but never before have they made such a high-pro file stand. While the actual infection rate is un known, it is believed to be in the hundreds of thousands of Internet-connected com puters. In just the first nine hours of its July 19 outbreak, it infected more than 250,000 systems. The government-funded Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) said the worm is predicted to start spreading again Tuesday evening. “This spread has the potential to disrupt business and personal use of the Internet for applications such as electronic com merce, email and entertainment,” a CERT advisory warns. The officials are frustrated that even though a software inoculation was made available over a month before the worm’s first attack, many computers are still defenseless. The patch, which will protect computers, can be found on Microsoft’s Website. The worm defaces Websites with the words “Hacked by Chinese.” While it doesn’t destroy data, it could be modified See Worm on Page 2. Residents vote to stop bombing VIEQUES, Puerto Rico (AP) — Residents of Vieques voted overwhelmingly for the U.S. Navy immediately to stop bombing on this Puerto Rican island. The referendum is nonbinding, but the Puerto Rican government hopes it will influence Washington. Sixty-eight percent of vot ers supported an end to the bombing and the Navy’s with drawal from the island that is home to its prized Atlantic range. About 30 percent voted for the Navy to stay and re sume using live munitions, ac cording to the electoral com mission. President Bush’s plan to pull the Navy out of Vieques in 2003 and allow training with inert bombs to continue in the inter im mustered less than 2 percent — 81 votes. Islanders celebrated what they called “a victory for peace in Vieques” with whoops of joy, blaring car horns and the wav ing of Puerto Rican and Vieques flags. Puerto Rico Gov. Sila M. Calderon has said the results have no legal standing but do carry “moral force” that she hopes will influence the U.S. government. But after the results were announced, the Navy said it would continue its training, due to resume on Vieques on Wednesday, and keep looking for an alternative for when it leaves the island in 2003. “The outcome of this refer endum, organized by Gov. Sila Calderon, will have no impact on the Navy or our focus,” said Lt. Cmdr. Kate Mueller, a Washington-based Navy spokesperson. Dozens of people lined up outside polling stations that opened at 8 a.m. and 75 per cent of the 5,900 registered voters had cast ballots within four hours, the electoral com mission said. Calderon’s referendum was called to give islanders the op tion of asking for an immediate stop to the bombing that began See Vieques on Page 2. working in tight, cramped quarters but in such a way as to allow the functioning of the medical center to continue unimpeded.” Heger said Wellborn will have one lane ctosed at a timej but John Kimbrough Boulavard extending from Wellborn to Olsen Boulavard will be closed during the entire time of the construction. It has not yet been deter mined how many of the park ing garage spots will be allo cated for student contract parking. Police: Attacks are not related DALLAS (AP) — Several as saults in affluent south Tyler have some fearing that a serial rapist is at work in the East Texas city, although police say they be lieve the attacks are unrelated. Police Chief Gary Swindle said the four attempted sexual as saults and two rapes in a five-mile area of upper- and middle-class neighborhoods are “nothing so special or out of the norm.” But after being asked for de tailed information on Tyler’s in cidence of rape, the chief ac knowledged that the department’s statistical data tracking sexual assaults is flawed and inaccurate, The Dallas NLoi~n- ing News reported in a story for Monday’s editions. Police spokesman Chris Moore said the department’s computerized crime reporting system cannot map where rapes have historically occurred, and the department cannot accu rately say how many attacks or attempts have been reported this year or last. « I know a lot of people ore scared to death. What's taking place is unusual for Tyler.” — Jack Skeen Smith County district attorney A Dallas Morning News review of year 2000 case summaries shows 35 rapes and three at tempted rapes reported, but few led to arrests or prolonged in vestigation. Sixty-nine percent were closed or cleared because victims were considered unbe lievable, lacked evidence or dropped charges. Thirty-two percent of 2 5 rape cases reported last year in sur rounding Smith County were closed for similar reasons, ac cording to the Smith County Sheriff’s Department. Moore told the newspaper that many of last year’s rape complaints were simply false. The first of six attacks began in October, with four since ear ly May. They have prompted an increase in demand for gun and self-defense courses, along with orders for home security alarms. “I know a lot of people are scared to death. I get a lot of questions,” said Smith County District Attorney Jack Skeen. See Attacks on Page 2.