I natii min :k Sports: World Cup round up • Page 3 Opinion: Women should not be prom king • Page 5 jfferson URI Volume 108 • Issue 149 • 6 pages 108 Years Serving Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com Wednesday, June 12, 2002 Sweet testing RANDAL FORD • THE BATTALION Biomedical engineering graduate student Justin Baba sets up a laser to test the amount of glucose and blood sugar levels in a rabbit's eye, which is directly correlat ed to the body's blood sugar levels. The system's goal is to develop a way for diabetics to test blood sugar levels using lasers instead of needles. The research, which is pioneered by Dr. Cote of the Biomedical engi neering department, will hopefully replace the painful methods currently used by diabetics and others to test blood sugar levels. Senate condemns acts of plagiarism By Don White THE BATTALION The Faculty Senate condemned pla giarism and other acts of academic dis honesty by University professors in its meeting Monday in response to the con troversy and dismissal of Dr. Mary Zey, professor of agricultural economics. The decision will potentially allow for strict consequences to any profes sors involved in plagiarism, despite tenure or rank. Zey was fired in March when a University Investigation Committee concluded she published information belonging to faculty member Harland Prechel and former faculty member John Boies. University president Dr. Ray M. Bowen fired Zey, then reversed the decision after the Committee on Academic Freedom, Responsibility and Tenure (CAFRT) said Zey’s offense did not warrant dismissal. The CAFRT has limitations when determining whether or not a dismissal is for a good cause. The case was placed on the Faculty Senate’s agenda in May with the intent to receive faculty response. The Faculty Senate represents facul ty interests on campus and decided an official response to a situation involving a faculty member was necessary. Dr. Michael L. Greenwald, a Senate member and former member of the Senate’s executive committee, said the Senate felt the need to reassert the importance of integrity. “This certainly expresses the senti ments of the faculty at Texas A&M,” he said. “It was basically non-controversial and passed very easily,” he said. The lack of debate during this meeting was in contrast to the original proposal at the Senate’s meeting in May, which was met with some resistance. Senators objected to the lack of information See Response on page 2 Northside residents unable to use Sbisa A&M returns state grant money By Kevin Espenlaub THE BATTALION Texas A&M failed to distribute over V H$850,0()0 allocated from the state legislature O hgfor student scholarships through the TEXAS OUHGrant program this past school year, accord ing to a report by the Texas Higher Education _ ^Coordinating Board. The money was part of the $5.6 million the "school received to help put highly successful et economically disadvantaged students /W^ 0111 t ^ ie state through college. “Obviously, it is very disappointing that ^ ' this money was not used for what it was orig- nally intended for,” said State Representative and Vice-Chairman of the Higher Education Committee Fred Brown. “I was one of the co sponsors of that bill and it was designed to ?ive all of Texas’ best and brightest students the opportunity to attend college, so it is a shame that every dime of it wasn’t used.” The TEXAS Grant, also known as the Toward Excellence, Access, and Success Cram, was originally established in 1999 and provided almost $18 million to state schools he inten®° P rov ide grants to students who completed teps tod di See Grant Money on page 2 nepotic Top ten public universities iu Texas that returned the most grant scholarship money to the state this year: from tei ince at out, a sh’sjug east s this nil i on chat Authorir 1 'AUiM-ation > >^^^mtmnMEeuirned Prairie. View A&M $5.1 million $2.9 million University of Texas- Pan .American $8.4 million $1.9 million LrT-El Paso $5.8 million $1.6 million ITT-San Antonio $4.3 million $1.2 million UT-Ariington $2.8 million $1.04 million UTDalla* $1.8 million $884,222 Texas A&M j $5.6 million $850,105 Texas Southern $2.2 million $797,164 University of Houston-: Downtown $1.8 million $726,497 l^amar University- Beaumont $1.9 million $700,117 Source! Tc*.a» Higher Education Coordinating Board .source: ie*as Higher tuiucation uE battalion By Melissa Sullivan St Christina Hoffman THE BATTALION Over 600 students living on campus this summer can expect a challenge when trying to find places to eat because of the closure of Sbisa Dining Hall to residents. Sbisa will' only be open Tuesdays and Thursdays for lunch during new student conferences. Housing officials say students attending summer school and living on campus are required to live in Northside residence halls because of new student conferences and other group activities which are being housed on the south side of campus. However, the only dining option available on the Northside to students is the Underground Food Court, open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. The only dining facility open all day to students is the Commons Dining Center located on Southside. “We find that students want to eat at the Underground anyway because of the number of options available,” said Cindy Zawieja, associate director of Food Services. Joy Hosford, a resident hall adviser at Lechner Hall and a senior biomed ical sciences major, said it is helpful that the Underground is open but she prefers Sbisa because they provide healthier food. Before Sbisa closed for renovations in the Fall of 2000, Zawieja said they opened The Underground for dinner dur ing the summer months, but due to the amount of customers they received, that option did not work out this summer. “If we get business we open, if we do not, we close,” she said. Sbisa is open during new student orientation and is available to anyone with cash, a meal plan or Aggie Bucks, not just parents and new students, Zawieja said. “In the past we have opened Duncan Dining Hall during orientation but stu dents have no idea what an all-you-can eat experience is like,” Zawieja said. “We just recently renovated Sbisa and we feel it is a real showcase which shows the history of Food Services.” An estimated record 17,000 students are attending summer school at A&M, and roughly 800 students have pur chased a meal plan. It is these numbers Food Services uses to determine what they will open and what they do not, says Zawieja. Most students attending summer school live off campus and usually look at what is near their class when decid ing where to eat, and Food Services tries to accommodate that as much as possible, Zawieja said. “We have opened the Memorial Student Center Cafeteria and 12th Man International Food Court because new people usually do not see the Hullabaloo Food Court located See Sbisa on page 2 Bush takes on plan for homeland security agency KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- President Bush asked congressional Republicans and Democrats on Tuesday to work together on expediting creation of his new domestic security agency. He received noncommittal Assurances of action “in the not-too-distant future.” The president assembled congressional leaders from both parties in the White House Cabinet Room to press for biparti san action on his massive proposal, the most extensive restructuring of the federal government in more than 50 years. “What I’ve heard is there's a commitment to get this done in a way that takes any parti sanship out of the issue, and at the same time strives for a date certain” for approval. Bush told reporters at the close of the meeting. He echoed a call by House Minority Leadei Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.. to pass legislation creating a Department of Homeland Security by Sept. I 1. From the White House, Bush headed to Kansas City, Mo., where he hoped a visit to the city's water treatment plant would show Americans how his plan to improve the domestic security bureaucracy m Washington would better protect them in their everyday lives. But lawmakers who must approve Bush’s proposal told him it will undergo careful and patient scrutiny. House Speaker Dennis Hasten, a Republican, and Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, a Democrat, were equally vague about suggestions that the plan could be enacted by Sept. 1 1. “That’s certainly an area that we’d like to aim to get done,” Hasten said. Daschle said Bush’s plan leaves a lot of unanswered questions about the efficiency of the FBI and CIA — questions that the Senate must review in detail “so that at some point in the not-too-distant future we’re able to answer them with greater confidence than we can today.” In Missouri, Bush hoped to address some of those questions, said White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe. The presi dent has proposed having the new depart ment analyze intelligence from the CIA. FBI, National Security Agency and others, but without any direct authority over the gathering of the information. Bomber kills 6, hurts 8 in Israeli restaurant HERZLIYA, Israel (AP) — A Palestinian bomber blew himself up in a restaurant just north of Tel Aviv on Tuesday, killing one Israeli teenager and wounding eight other people in one in a series of violent incidents that left six other Palestinians dead. The violence erupted as Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was in Washington trying to persuade con gressional leaders that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat is not a partner for peace talks because of persistent Palestinian violence. Israeli forces surrounded Arafat’s West Bank headquarters for a second day. The bomber blew himself up inside a small, downtown restaurant in the city of Herzliya at 7:50 p.m., killing himself and the teen-ager and wounding eight other people, witnesses and rescue workers said. David Baker, an official in Sharon’s office, denounced the attack, saying, “The Herzliya terror attack is another example of the Palestinians’ intention to commit murder for the sake of murder.” Herzliya Mayor Yael German arrived at the scene a few minutes after the blast. “It’s horrible when innocent civilians, men, women and children, who were just out to get a bite to eat, are hurt in a despicable terror attack,” she said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. The Palestinian leadership denounced the attack because “it gives Israel a reason to attack the Palestinian people.” Later Tuesday, a 9-year-old Palestinian boy was killed and another 13-year-old boy was injured when Israeli soldiers shot at them near the Jewish settlement of Netzarim in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian security and hospital officials said. The army said troops responded to intense firing at an army outpost in the area. Earlier, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Palestinians killed two fel low Palestinians suspected of col laborating with Israel. One body was dragged to the place where Marwan Zalloum, local leader of Bombings continue A suicide bomber exploded a bomb in a restaurant in Herzliya, Israel, Tuesday. Three Israelis were also injured in an explosion in the West Bank. o 15 mt 15 km m m fzliya 0 & Tel Aviv BjHwBy 5. ;; ISRAEL Jerusalerp© West Bank Suicide bombing injured nine Ramaliah Dead Kiryat sea rba mism SOURCES: Associated Press; ESRI AP the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades mili tia, was killed in an April 22 Israeli helicopter strike on his car. The burned-out hulk of the car was still there, a grisly memorial to the militia leader blamed by Israel for directing and carrying out many attacks. The Al Aqsa group claimed responsibility for killing the sus pected collaborators, saying in a leaflet that the pair helped Israel.