encourage clii that goal, tion spokeswomi said the too broad to pay for ife women if is NEWS IN BRIEF T 1 I 1 lexa! ing trom North Te\a ?d in a roi Hows the j , eventually! iver at Rec klahoma. e carried 5 tie and million 1867 to 1884, h. former directi i story Section of .'ol lection at Te' ;it\ in liM, cientists clone uman embryo BOSTON (AP) — A research [ompany reported Sunday it |ad cloned the first human |mbryo, a development it aid was aimed at producing ienetically matched replace- ent cells for patients with a ide range of diseases. But the news from Idvanced Cell Technology If Worcester, Mass., drew Iwift protests from religious Ind political leaders who law it as a step toward lloning human beings. I Several states, including Jlalifomia, have banned uman cloning, and Congress k considering such a ban. But [ompany officials insisted Iheir work is the first step in roviding hope for people with pinal injuries, heart disease |nd other ailments. "These are exciting prelim inary results,” said Dr. Robert P. Lanza, one of the esearchers at Advanced Sell Technology. Lanza and the company's top executive Michael West aid they had no interest in transplanting such early mbryos into a woman's womb to give birth to a cloned human being, nor was it clear that their embryo would be capable of that. PUBLIC EYE leverage student expenditures for 2001-2002 On-campus $11,593 Off-campus $12,233 AGGIELIFE Page 3 Put your hands up Police officers give the nitty-gritty of the risks, benefits of their job r graduationi mt students. If i, please visit® imes ’ ler at 862-tl etired Texas Ail ie WOC toi Si nts of Texas Ad ) for a large W Event Dif Jan. 3—Jan. I TAMU Outdo* Page 7 Aggies cruise, 91-70 Second half outburst gives A&M third win OPINION Page 9 A proud tradition Returns to A&M - As Bonfire fades, Fish Drill Team a welcome addition WEATHER TODAY 50% ^ HIGH 55° F LOW OOOQO^OO' oooooooo 45° F TOMORROW 100% HIGH : 45° F LOW OOOQOOOQ , 35° F FORECASTS COURTESY OF www.weathermanted.com FBI looks at international students By Emily Peters THE BATTALION Federal agencies have requested information about international students from col leges and universities in the aftermath of the Sept. I I terror ist attacks and following anthrax investigations, but Texas A&M officials said no private A&M student informa tion has been released. More than 220 schools reported that law enforcement officials had requested student information as part of their investigation into the Sept. I l terrorist attacks, according to a survey of l,188 private and pub lic institutions by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admission Officers. Recent anti-terrorist legislation has made it easier for federal agencies to obtain court orders for an individual’s private information. A&M officials said they have not received any court order requests for private international student information. It is typical for the FBI to request public information, said Director of International Student Programs Suzanne Broleskey. “It has always been true that the FBI has questioned various international students, faculty and staff and other non-interna tional individuals on campus,” Broleskey said. “These types of inquiries are made on a fairly regular basis.” Bryan FBI officials said the requests are normal and only come into the spotlight now that there is new legislation and the agency has been searching more stringently. “We just make sure a student is a student,” an agent from the Bryan office said. FBI headquarters spokesper- FBI’s SEARCH FOR TERRORISTS * THE FBI HAS REOUESTEO INFORMATION ON INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS AT 220 UNIVERSITIES. * A&M HAS 3,500 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS * FBI HAS NOT REQUESTED P R1V AT E I N FO R M A Tl O N ON ANY A&M STUDENTS. * INFORMATION WAS SUBPOENAED ON ONE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS STUDENT. sons would not comment on what the agency is seeking through the inquiries, or why inquiries are made into particu lar individuals. Survey results show that most law enforcement inquiries requested directory information See Students on page 2. Guiding light CODY WAGES* THE BATTALION Jeryl Hamilton, a sophomore environmental design project for an Environmental Design 205 class project major, installs a light bulb into a conceptual light house Monday night in the Langford Architecture Center. Website developed to help students with homework Radiation a possible terrorist weapon By Tanya Nading THE BATTALION The possibility that terrorists may use radioactive materials as weapons against the United States means that first responders, such as emergency crews, fire fighters and law enforcement, should be prepared, according to a study released this month by the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement. First responders need to know how to identify the biological and medical effects of radiation and must be trained to handle situations where radiation con tamination has occurred, said health physicist John W. Poston Sr., a nuclear engineering professor at Texas A&M and an author of the council’s report. “Our intent was to provide assistance to first respon ders, to give them tools for the kinds of events they might face: events concerning weapons of mass destruc tion or improvised nuclear weapons,” Poston said. The possibility of using radioactive exposure as a terrorist weapon seems more likely than terrorists using nuclear weapons, Poston said, because radioactive materials can be released in small loca tions and amounts. “A terrorist organization is more likely to release a small amount of radiation, possibly with an explosion likely caused by dynamite or another explosive, rather than use a nuclear weapon,” Poston said. “It is an unlikely case that a nuclear weapon would be used. We know countries have nuclear weapons, but hopefully there is a strong safeguard around them.” Poston said he believes some terrorists will use the threat of nuclear weapons against the United States as a scare tactic. See Radiation on page 2. USPS to radiate mail, kill anthrax By Tanya Nading THE BATTALION By Eric Ambroso THE BATTALION College students across North America have access to an online service that allows them to pose exact academic problems and receive answers from graduate stu dents. Grant Goodwin, creator of the Ridethebellcurve.com, said it is designed to assist students with 42 subjects any time of the day. Graduate students from across Canada and the United States oper ate 24 hours a day to give step-by- step solutions for the specific needs of the students. “We want to work with universi ties to improve the quality of educa tion for undergraduates,” Goodwin said. “Eventually, we plan to use real-life professionals to assist stu dents with problems they are having in their field. We also plan to hire undergraduates to tutor high school students’online.” A $3 fee is charged when the stu dents accept the solution to their problem, 80 percent of which pays the graduate student that posted the solution. The company currently is working on a solution bank that would allow students to view previ ously posted solutions to problems that are similar to their own. Ridethebellcurve.com has also cre ated an essay-review service enabling students to have their papers edited by graduate students. Many university officials in the United States have speculated that the Website will promote cheating. “Undergraduates will cheat and are cheating now,” Goodwin said. “We figure that if they cheat using our system that they would have cheated anyway. It is our intent to allow students to use the service to gather sample solutions from the site as they study for their examina tions, thus relieving university teaching assistants (TA’s) of some of the burden during these hectic peri ods of the academic year. If students are willing to pay money and spend time learning how to solve the prob lem. then they will want to learn the material anyway.” See Homework on page 2. With an increase in anthrax being sent through the mail, the U.S. Postal Service has announced that it will use radiation to kill traces of the bacte ria before mail is distributed. The results from radiation tests performed by Dr. Leslie Braby. a Texas A&M nuclear engineer and research professor, show that electronic-beam radiation will not damage most mail. “Our results show that radiation has not caused error in CDs or CD-RW” Braby said. “I suspected that the radiation would bleach the colors of a pho tograph, but there was no change in the coloring of the photographs or of ink-jet materials.” Braby said the study did reveal that certain materials were harmed by the radiation waves. “Unprocessed film will be ruined by overexpo sure to the radiation. Plant seeds and plant cuttings will be damaged as well,” Braby said. “Any other mail screening processes, as opposed to radiation to eliminating bacteria spores, would be equally See MAIL on page 2.