The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 17, 2003, Image 2

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Wednesday, September 17, 2003
THE BATTALIO!
FISH
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Please Leave,
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6eATS op FANS and has A thikd eye ON HIS
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By ^ou^e
Hey Jake,
how was your
philosophy
class?
Not good.
We started
talking about
knowledge.
I mean, what can we know for sure? Can
we know anything? If we can't, does that
mean we claim to know that we don’t know
anything? And what about not knowing if
know that we don't know anything?
BY: IWU UAYB
tHeeeec pwp
MAS ALSO SRASPeO
THE KJfcA OP K?0My
LAtety and is Tiateo
PWR fly IT'S APPLICATIONS^
Subpoenas
Continued from page 1
music over peer-to-peer
Internet services became popu
lar, compels Internet providers
to turn over the names of sus
pected pirates upon subpoena
from any U.S. District Court
clerk’s office. A judge’s signa
ture is not required. Critics con
tend judges ought to be more
directly involved.
The appeals court must
decide whether Bates correctly
ruled against Verizon earlier this
year. The same appeals court
previously declined to put
Bates’ decision on hold pending
the appeal, forcing Verizon to
hand over the names of its tar
geted subscribers.
“We look forward to the
court of appeals’ affirmation of
those well reasoned decisions,”
said R1AA President Cary
Sherman, whose handheld digi
tal recorder was quietly confis
cated by courthouse security
before the hearing. Recording
devices aren’t permitted in fed
eral courtrooms.
Verizon had argued unsuc
cessfully that Internet providers
should only be compelled to
respond to such subpoenas when
pirated music is stored on com
puters that providers directly
control, such as a Web site,
rather than on a subscriber’s per
sonal computer.
Senior Judge Stephen F.
Williams told Verrilli that per
mitting subpoenas in these cases
“makes a lot of sense from a
policy standpoint,” but ques
tioned whether they were per
mitted under some interpreta
tions of the law.
In his ruling, Bates wrote
that Verizon’s interpretation
“makes little sense from a poli
cy standpoint,” and warned that
it “would create a huge loop
hole in Congress’ effort to pre
vent copyright infringement on
the Internet.”
Sen. Sam Brownback, R-
Kan., has introduced a bill to
protect Internet providers from
such subpoenas. His proposal
would block subpoenas except
in pending civil lawsuits or in
cases where pirated data Tiles
were stored on easily accessible
locations, such as Web sites.
Still, a courtroom challenge
may be Verizon’s best hope.
Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
said last week that it was too
early to consider changing the
1998 law. He asked lawyers on
all sides and consumers to report
to his office about their experi
ences with these subpoenas over
the next six months.
Loans
Continued from page 1
says you can borrow ‘X’ amount of dollars does
n’t mean you have to take those dollars,”
Mowdy said.
Using statistics from schools and lenders, the
Education Department’s default rate is based on
the number of students who go 270 days without
making a payment during their first year of repay
ing a student loan.
In 2001, 5.7 million students obtained $39.7
billion in federally backed loans.
A Cambridge Consumer Credit Index survey
issued earlier this month found that outstanding
college debt hampered the ability of 68 percent of
graduates with student loans to make major pur
chases like homes or automobiles.
Jordan Goodman, a spokesman for the index,
said 22 percent of all Americans now carry student
loan debt, up from 18 percent from last year.
And a poll conducted by Harris Interactive for
Collegiate Funding Services — an education
finance and debt management corporation —
revealed that 55 percent of college graduates are
having problems meeting their financial goals
because of student loan debt.
An adjustment of career plans is one way some
graduates are coping with the crunch.
“My budget is tight, very tight,” said Jill
Deutscher, a Chicago high school teacher who
said loan debt played a role in her decision to
work summers and accept a higher-paying posi
tion in an urban school district, as opposed to less
er salary in a small town school system.
But while a $128-per-month consolidated loan
payment cuts heavily into her living expenses,
Deutscher — a 2002 graduate of Illinois State
University — said the $17,000 she’ll repay over
10 years is worth every penny.
“Without my education, I never would have
been able to do what I do,” she said.
In the Sept. 15 page
story “Affirmative action po!
cies still hazy for Texas
schools,” Dale Ganus, asso
ciate director for the office of
admissions at Texas Tecii
said the university had no!
yet decided on altering its
admissions policies.
School
Continued from page 1
Texas,” Stick said. “We need
find a way to make this work
a way that compliments t
campuses.”
Two fields that might be coo
sidered for research are nr
otechnology and biotedinoloj;
Stick said.
“We have to find a niche fa
this. We have to figure out wta
we’re going to do here andna
just blow state money,” Stick saic
Fines
Continued from page 1
P
r
Music
One of those who went
Albuquerque, N.M.. Sen. Jr
Hinojosa, D-McAllen, said
Senate should rescind the fki
“as a way to kiss and makeup.
Throughout the day, theta
ter infighting that had dominr
ed recent weeks gave wayi
handshakes and warm embrace
as Democrats and Republics
appeared together on the Senas
floor for the first time ini
month and a half.
“Today was a wonderfal
showing of good faith on even
senator’s part,” Harris saidafe
the Senate met briefly.
“All of us are professionals,
said Sen. Royce West, D-Dalk
“We can disagree withouttaij
disagreeable.”
It was a drastic change intone
from the rhetoric that flew across
the state borders while
Democrats staged their boyc«
over GOP attempts to redraw!
state’s congressional districts.
Republicans hold ever
statewide-elected post in Tkm
and say they should have more
representation in the state’s con
gressional delegation, whidi
Democrats control 17-15
Democrats argue the current dis
tricts should stand and say plait
before the Legislature this yeai
would hurt minorities.
The Texas Senate did not tali
up redistricting, or anything of
controversy, on Tuesday
Instead, for several minute!
before the session came toi
senators from both parties
gled and chatted pleasantly wil
each other.
That doesn’t mean that
will agree on each issue as
move forward.
Democrats found li
heavy barrels blocking
parking spots rather than tilt
small orange cones that
been there the day earlier.
Sen. Mike Jackson,
Pasadena, said that stripping
future quorum busters of theit
seniority status is not tougl
enough. He did not say wlia!
would be a stronger accept
able deterrent.
“I don’t feel like we haveaif
teeth in what we’re doing,
Jackson said.
Sen. Leticia Van de Putlt
chairwoman of the Senalf
Democratic Caucus, agreed tlii
proposed penalties woui
unlikely stop future lawmaker
from breaking quorum if the) 1
felt it would be their only optiof
to prevail on an issue.
“People who are really com
mitted to whatever stance
they’re going to do it,” Van A
Putte of San Antonio said. "I
don’t know that there is mudi
deterrent other than execution.'
It seems like
About to venture
school and mesh
centers a lot of
College stud
Morpheus have
any desired sonj
of charge.
Students knev
ful act but belie'
consequences fo
ly this act whic
subject to a fine
• “Some is legr
the associate pre
University.
w
There are nc
BuyMusic for pi
itors may have a
for $12.79; how<
ticular CD.
Most individi
Road,” are avail;
What started
has now opened
downloads mush
2 CDs” device, \
ing price is $29 ( J
Recognizing
loading songs, r
promise with the
The Recordin
of copyright is ‘
an idea, whethe
painting or writt
People are v
public by uplo
chat service, o
mixed CDs w
owner.
The Web site
four reasons why
1. Stealing m
2. Stealing m
ers and recordin
3. Stealing mi
new artists and c
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THE BATTALION
Sommer Hamilton, Editor in Chief
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