THE WAY IT PLAYS OUT T YVednesday - * 3 of a Kind Formerly Speakeasy Cover $ 3.00 . Thursday - * Bombshelter * * nn 1 f J 1 ‘ 1 Cover $ 5.00 From Ft. Worth Friday - * Feeding 5000 Cover $ 5.00 * * 1 ~ * _ Saturday * Schrodinger’s Cat * Cover $ 5.00 From Austin Where rea.1 musicians play! 201 W. 26th Street, Vowntown Bryan 775-7735 Cameron Reynolds Attorney At Law Licensed by the Texas Supreme Court Not Board Certified Class of ‘91 Jim James Attorney At Law Board Certified Criminal Law Class of ‘75 SPECIALIZING IN THE DEFENSE OF CRIMINAL CHARGES INCLUDING: Driving While Intoxicated All Alcohol and Drug Offenses All other Criminal Offenses y 979-846-1934 e-mail: jim@tca.net website: http://jimwjames.wld.com Experience Brazilian Agriculture!!! Winter Break: Study Abroad Program December 11 - 24, 2001 4 hours of credit in Agriculture Explore rainforests! Experience the world's largest waterfalls! View crop & livestock production in central Brazil! Learn first-hand how Brazil's agriculture compares and competes with the U.S.! For more information contact: Dr. Ed Runge Dept, of Soil & Crop Sciences 979-845-3066 e-runqe@tamu.edu Kimberly Bailes Inti. Agriculture Program 979-845-8713 k-bailes@tamu.edu Student Organization Recognition Seminars %o * ^4/ V/ Has your student organization completed a recognition seminar? The chief student leader and one other officer must attend a seminar before an organization can complete the recognition process. You can register to attend a seminar at: http://studentactivities.tamu.edu/recognitioninfo/ Organizations must complete the full recognition process by October 1,2001 We have seminars currently scheduled for the first week of August and the first week of classes. <* !****» For more information, please contact us at •(979)845-1133 or email us :student-activities@tamu.edu .partner* In teaming Jeff Kempf, Editor in Chief The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semes ters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University. Periodicals Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion,Texas A&M University, 1111TAMU, College Station,TX 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students atTexasA&M University in,the Division of Student Media, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed : McDonald Bililding. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E-mail: Thebattalion@hotmail.com; Web site: http://www.thebatt.com . Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For cam- „ pus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. ■^-Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. First copy free, additional copies 254. Mail subscriptions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester, $17.50 for the summer or $10 a month. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express, call 845-2611. Breathe easy I Friday at iference met the Aggie f< hat despitt hey are rea only the B hampionsf ional cham Safety Jay STUART VILLANUEVATmBATtm Breathing masks line the walls at the Brayton Fire Training Field as fire fighters gear up to participate in drills Friday morning. Hundreds of fire fighters trav elled to College-Station to attend the training session. Security hackers e team s Each team ake it to th ur team’s g Head co rought qua s, center S rooks to om the pre at being u ad thing t ormally shi “We liki ght now, v he Big 12. nd Nebrasl 11 on them,’ Last seaso 5 record is a 1 son the Aggi “It’s disa] you don’t w SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — As a tank offi cer in the U.S. Army, Lance Spitzner care fully studied the range of Soviet tanks, their speed and rate of fire. It is called getting to know the enemy. Later, as a computer security consultant, Spitzner was surprised at the sorry state of intelligence gathering on people who break into computers, steal information, erase data and launch attacks. Some companies infiltrate hacker groups and hire hackers as consultants. But in this ever-escalating war, little was being gathered about their methods until after the damage was done. From his worries, the Honeynet Project was born. It is an attempt to uncover the lat est and greatest hacking techniques, moti vations and targets by setting up a network of systems dubbed “honeypots,” solely to watch them being hacked. “Everything in security has been about prevention, protection and reaction,” Spitzner said. “The bad guys have the ini tiative. We want to take the initiative and experts studying we with 'honeypotl gain intelligence on the bad guys and count er that before they attack.” The Honeynet consists of ordinary com puters and software with one difference: The system seamlessly and quietly records every bit of information that passes through, including keystrokes. In Honeynet’s two years of operation^ the half-dozen machines locked away in the spare bedroom of Spifzner’s suburban Chicago home hosted everything from ma licious, virus-like worms to a group of Pak istani hackers intent on stealing credit card numbers and defacing Websites. At first Spitzner relied on an informal group of colleagues to help solve the prob lems his computers recorded. Now, the team is 30 strong and includes computer gu rus, forensic experts, statisticians and psy chologists — all volunteers. The cost was low: Nobody was paid, and all equipment came out of Spitzner’s closet. Team members have called the FBI when it appeared laws were about to be broken, but their main purpose was to collect data for research, not prosecution. The are rarely even identified. And when it appears a hacker isate divert a I loneynet computer to kind tack against other systems, the hone cut off to avoid liability. The I loneynet Project aims ti'l awareness and educate otherpro/ess] about security risks through papers an group’s book, “Know Your Enemy,”soi be published by Addison-YVesley. The* group also hopes to predict quickly machines are likely to beviolati ter hackers begin scanning their target “T he fastest one of our honeypot- ever been hacked is 15 minutes,” Spi said. “This should scare the hell out of We do nothing to advertise. We j systems out there. This is my ISDNH my home bedroom. It’s not IBM or thing like that.” The team turned off the original new earlier this year and started planning oration Poohbear,” which will be through book sales and grants. PARIS (A arms in triun Sunday, easil France title £ and taking tf other level. His leadei pack as he c from Austin, class of his o^ Tours in a rc v 1 With the ahim, Armstr Star-Spangb three week mountain pe He steppi braced his girls, and tc like his fathi “It’s the b Armstrong s am happy t< Tour. It’s a sj He later t< tree-lined C Attacks Continued from Page 7 “What’s taking place is un usual for Tyler.” All the attacks came between 10 p.m. and 1 a.m., and all but one involved an intruder who crept into a home. Five of die at tacks have involved a tan white or Hispanic man who appeared to be in his late 20s to mid-30s, is 5 feet 10 inches to 6 feet tall and weighed 175 to 200 pounds. Three victims described their assailant as a fit man of similar size and build with lit tle or no arm hair. Some of the six women who were attacked said police have had to be prodded to pursue some leads and have overlooked some evidence. Swindle, however, said his department has acted properly. He said he formed a task force in May after a woman from a prominent family was attacked in an exclusive neigh borhood. Vieques Continued from Page 7 six decades ago. A federal refer endum scheduled for November only allows them to choose be tween the Bush plan and the Navy remaining indefinitely and resuming live bombing. “From the time I was old enough to know what they were doing to my island I wanted them to leave,” said Candido L. Felix, a carpenter, handyman and mechanic born in 1940, die year the Navy came to Vieques Worm Continued from Page 7 to do so. At least two mutations have already been found. Code Red exploits a flaw discovered in June in Mi crosoft’s Internet Information Services software used on In ternet servers. It is found in Windows’ NT and 2000 oper ating systems. Only computers set to use the English language will have their Web pages defaced. From the first through the 19 of every month, the worm spreads. From the 20 on, it attacks the White Flouse Website, trying to knock it offline. The White House took pre cautions against it, changing its numerical Internet address to dodge the attack. . Even though the target has moved, the infected computers will still launch their attack. This, officials said, could slow down the Internet causing spo radic but widespread outages. La£t week, the Pentagon was forced to shut down public ac cess to all of its Websites tem porarily to purge and protect them from the Code Red worm. * Because Code Red spread so quickly, security companies have not been able to figure out who wrote and released it. Code Red also can damage smaller networks by affecting a certain type of Internet routers, made by Cisco Systems, used for data traffic control. Steve Lipner, head of Mi crosoft’s security response cen ter, said the company is looking for new ways to distributing patches more efficiently. The government relips on Microsoft and other technology companies to secure everything from defense networks to finan cial systems. “The protection of the Inter net requires a partnership with the government, private compa nies and the public as a whole,” NIPC’s Dick said. We wont peace for Vieques, and that means the Navy has to go. — Geraldo Vegerano construction worker and appropriated two-thirds of the 18-mile-long island. Felix blamed the Navy exer cises for his poverty, Vieques’ undeveloped fishing and tourism industries and the re sulting split in families whose young members go to the main land to find work. % “We want peace for Vieques, and that means the Navy has to go,” said Geraldo Vegerano, a construction worker who has to commute to neighboring Cule- hra island to work. Decades of simmering re sentment over the Navy’s pres ence exploded in anger and protests after civilian guard David Sanes was killed in 1999 by two off-target bombs on prized range. On Sunday, not all of Sanes’ family voted to stop bombing. “People are afraid toed out here,” Maria Sane; cousin of the victim, told pro-Navy rally. “Butman) them are going to vote for Navy to stay, she said. The Navy says theAtlai bombing range, whichtafe one-tenth of the island eastern tip and is 10 miles the biggest town, provide sential training that saves in combat. Efforts to find an alterE have produced proposals patchwork of different site different types of trainingot mainland all widi one big back: nobody wants 1 dropping in their backyard Two weeks ago the Nay nounced a program of com) sation that would pay fishei $ 100 for each day that boil exercises prevent them woe and grants of up to $25,Of' start small businesses. Many say that is too li late. “If they gave me wouldn’t take it,” Felix said' these years they never ga' anything but problems.' they want to give us monej like trying to buy us.” Anti-Navy activists sa; bombing has damaged the^ ronment and the health f landers who say they have er-than-normal cancer infant mortality rates. Thef' denies causing health proM