Page 8 ■ Daily Nebraskan ■ Wednesday, October 27,1999 Matthew McConaughey arrested, booked, released AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Actor Matthew McConaughey was arrested early Monday during a disturbance at his home in which police said he was dancing naked and playing bongo drums. McConaughey, 29, was arrested at around 3 a.m. and booked at the Travis County Jail on suspicion of possession of marijuana, possession of drug para phernalia and resisting transportation, according to a police statement. He was charged only with resisting transportation, a Class A misde meanor. Travis County Attorney Ken Oden said the drug-related charges were dis missed because they were not support ed by the facts of the case. McConaughey was released Monday afternoon on a $1,000 per sonal recognizance bond. McConaughey, a 1993 graduate of the University of Texas, would not comment on the charges. Joe Turner, McConaughey’s lawyer, said the police illegally searched the actor’s home and used excessive force. Police said they were called to McConaughey’s home in an upscale neighborhood in west Austin after receiving a complaint of loud music. Police saw him through a window naked and playing drums and another man dancing and clapping. The other suspect was handcuffed but not detained. McConaughey has starred in sev eral movies, including, “A Time to Kill,” “Amistad,” and “Dazed and Confused.” The Prairie Cats (swing) Fri The Rumbles 10 29 (rock & Roll) ^ Sandy Creek (Country) , Pla Mor 1 BALLROOM • 6600 W. O St. www.dailyneb.comwww.dailyneb.comwww.dailyneb.comwwWkdailyneb.comwww.dailyneb.comwww.dailyneb.com Report examines technology WASHINGTON (AP) - California, home of Silicon Valley, provides the fewest computer terminals for its stu dents. The District of Columbia, in a region through which 65 percent of global Internet traffic flows, offers schoolchildren the worst access to com puters able to surf the World Wide Web. And new teachers are no more like ly than veteran peers to know how to teach with computers, and less than one-fifth of the dollars schools spend on technology goes to train them. An annual report on school technol ogy released Tuesday said that while the number of school computers has dou bled since 1993 to 8 million nationwide, many states lag in access they provide students. Furthermore, the report said, if classroom computers are going to make a difference, the nation must focus on training teachers to do more than surf ing Web sites and sending e-mail. “The public is beginning to ask for proof that their investment in technolo gy has paid off,” according to the report by Market Data Retrieval of Shelton, Conn. “It’s no longer sufficient to point to inventory lists, as important as they are, as the only proof of progress.” Still, the Dun & Bradstreet research subsidiary’s sixth annual “Technology in Education” report highlights state by-state comparisons of student-to computer ratios. And despite a national low of 5.7 pupils per computer, down « The public is beginning to ask for proof that their investment in technology has paid off.” Market Data Retrieval report from 10.8 in 1993, this year’s results continue to show varying degrees of computer access nationwide. Pupils have computer access above the national average in Midwestern states, with little of the computer-related industry that exists In Washington state, home of software giant Microsoft and Internet companies. But California falls behind at 8.1 students per computer. Nancy Sullivan, the state education department’s tefttyiolagymanager, said she’s seen an increase in private sector school partnerships on boostmg'tech nology since this summer, when Gov. Gray Davis asked several Silicon Valley executives to chip in. “What needs to be looked at in com paring state A to state B is where they started from,” Sullivan said. “As much as I’d love for us to be three students to one, it will take us longer to get there.” Similarly, Joseph Lane, chief tech nology officer for the schools in the District of Columbia, said the system had to concentrate dollars on preparing its older, urban school buildings for rewiring before it could buy terminals. Market Data Retrieval gathered the information through mail and telephone surveys of the nation’s 86,000 schools, with 48 percent responding. The survey was not a sample survey, so no margin of error was calculated, said Kathleen Brantley, the company’s director of product development. She said the company ensures that a profile of responding schools matches charac teristics of all schools surveyed. Some critics warned Tuesday against analyzing education technology solely on boxes and wires. “I don’t think a shopping-cart men tality tells much of the story,” said William L. Rukeyser, coordinator of Learning in the Real World, a 4-year-old Woodland, Calif., nonprofit that ques tions the overemphasis of school dollars on education technology. “We’ve had this kind of multibillion investment without the necessary level of sophisti cation to use it - and that is across the board.” London Paris Mi Lan Amsterdam From Lincoln each based on a rt purchase. 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