Weather Friday, partly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the 90s, lows near 70. — National Weather Service THURSDAY June 23, 1994 Vol. 93, No. 162 (6 pages) “Serving Texas A&M since 1893” % I 0\J -T/6/N6... SWoW IoRe.oW, Lesbian, Ve will be surer and edule ol ;t of the ions—ca rvice tni d faculli should bi e days ir un dale otices are >e run le luestions 345-3313. 27 tas I \ )4 j 64 Rockets take NBA title, 90-84 DA invites A&M employees to testify Brazos County District Attorney Bill Turner has sent out invitations to a number of Texas A&M employees lo appear before a grand jury next week, Turner’s office confirmed Wednesday. The invitations give the employees an optional opportunity to give testimony at the hearings as Turner be wrapping up an investigation into alleged misconduct within the A&M System. Head of Chemistry dept, steps down mmmmmmffimsmmmmmm Texas A&M’s chemistry department head will step down from his position Aug. 31, when his term expires. Dr. Michael Hall said he wants to return to teaching and to research after two four-year terms as department head. Mary Jo Powell, associate director of university relations, said an interim will be chosen by the Dean of Science before Hall leaves the position. Knox honors Aggie Band anniversary Artist Benjamin Knox will help the Aggie Band celebrate its 100-year anniversary Friday, when he unveils a painting commemorating the centennial. Knox's painting will be unveiled at the Sam Houston Corps of Cadets Center tomorrow at 3 p.m. Reproductions of the painting will be offered in conjunction with the band’s year-long celebration. The unveiling is part of a meeting of the Corps of Cadets Development Council. Baku String Quartet performs today The Baku String Quartet will perform a free concert in the MSC Flagroom today at noon. The quartet, consisting of two violinists, a viola player and a cellist, is from Azerbaijan, part of the old Soviet Union. The quartet has performed together since 1992. The concert is sponsored by the MSC Summer Programs Committee. HOUSTON (AP) — Hakeem Olajuwon lived up to his MVP billing and the Houston Rockets won their first championship and gave the city its first major- league title, beating New York 90-84 Wednesday night in Game 7 of the NBA Finals. Olajuwon was brilliant — 25 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists — and capped his own triple crown with his first NBA championship and the series most valuable player award to add to his regular-season MVP trophy. As he had all series, Olaju won won the battle of centers with Patrick Ewing 10 years af ter Ewing’s Georgetown team beat Olajuwon’s Houston squad for the NCAA crown. Ewing fin ished with 17 points and 11 re bounds. And with the title still up for grabs down the stretch, the Rockets stopped a Knicks team that had the league’s best de fense, holding them to three field goals over the final 6:48. They also ended the Knicks’ quest to make their city the only one to win NBA and NHL titles in the same year. The Rangers ended their 54-year Stanley Cup drought eight days earlier in an other seven-game series. The Knicks were within 78-75 when Olajuwon hit a short jumper. Ewing missed a baseline jumper and Vernon Maxwell, part of the much-maligned Houston backcourt, nailed a 3- pointer with 1:48 left for an eight-point lead. When the ball went through, Rockets coach Rudy Tom- janovich stood with his arms raised in front of the bench and Maxwell fell to the floor near midcourt and was mobbed by his teammates as the Knicks called Please see Rockets, Page 6 Ap Photo Rockets Hakeem Olajuwon, 1993-94 MVP and 1994 NBA Finals MVP, stops Knicks Patrick Ewing from scoring during a 1991 match. <4* Mnrp Prisons packed Charity festival lifts off today By William Harrison The Battalion If you come for hot air balloons at this year’s Brazos Valley Balloon Classic, you’ll get more than you bargained for. For starters, the sev en-year-old festival, starting Thursday and running through Sunday at Lake Bryan, features the main event, balloon racing, as well as power boat racing. And heli copter rides. And arts and crafts exhibitions. And carnival rides. And a petting zoo... But only if you can af ford the $3 admission fee (parking’s free). A three- day pass costs $6, but kids under 12 get in free. Terry Boike, chairman of the non-profit, charity festival, said there’s no price - and no event - that can beat it in the area. “This is the biggest event in the Brazos Val- ley — bar none,” Boike said. “The average event of this size would charge $5-6, plus parking. Not for us.” Around 180 workers prepared for the event, which Boike expects to draw more than 30,000, better than the 18,000 that attended last year’s Balloon Classic. “This will be twice as big as last year,” Boike said. The event began seven years ago with 16 balloons and 600 people. Now, with 50 balloons and added attrac tions including three live bands a night, Boike says he wants the festival to drive for loftier, but attainable goals amid the national balloon racing circuit. “Our future goal is to shoot for the U.S. Na tional Tournament, a five-day festival that av- Iry, left on Sandy Creek Road for three miles. Gate Admission * Thursday — 4-10 p.m. Friday — noon till midnight Saturday — 6 a.m. till midnight Sunday — 6 a.m. till 8 p.m. * Admission is fee, $5 for all-night carnival rides Watch for a picture page Monday erages $25 million dollars a day in economic im pact,’’ Boike said. “It’s like the Super Bowl; you’ve got Walt Disney balloons and these corpo rate people - they come with expense accounts.” Boike said that it will take 2-3 years of consis tent success for the Clas sic to attract the tourna ment. However, the event has already attracted racers like Robert and Jetta Schantz from Balloon America, a professional balloon racing team out of Jacksonville, Florida. The two attend events around the nation and in vite the top 40 balloon pi lots to compete for the na tional title. And this year’s champ just happens to be Harold Cliver, a resident of Bryan, who invited the two to attend the Balloon Classic. “(Cliver) called us six months ago because we were the only professional balloon racing out there and asked, ‘How can I get you tied into it?’” Robert Schantz said. He said that the event offered him an op portunity to travel further west and create a larger base for his national tournament to be held later this year in Anniston, Alabama. Jetta Schantz broke nine women’s national and world records for distance with a 292- mile flight this January. She said she never tires of balloon racing and the events across the nation. “People sometimes forget that the first means that took man airborne was the hot air balloon, followed by gas balloons, blimps and planes,” she said. “It was lighter than air craft Please see Balloons, Page 6 Fifty new prisons deal with inmate By Amanda Fowle The Battalion State and Brazos County offi cials are taking new measures to eliminate prison overcrowding. Dick Lewis, spokesman for the Texas Department of Crim inal Justice, said the depart ment is waiting to move more than 30,000 inmates, currently in county jails, to state prisons. At the time, there is no space in state prisons. State officials consider the number of inmates an emer gency, so the Department of Criminal Justice has been asked to build additional space as quickly and as economically as possible, Lewis said. It was authorized to spend $168 million on the construc tion of 50 prisons that would house 74,432 prisoners. “This demonstrates a com mitment on the part of the leadership of our state to deal with the overcrowded prison situation,” Lewis said. He said the construction of the new prisons is ahead of schedule. The cost of the facil ities is 15 percent less than previous facilities because pre- engmeered metal buildings are being used instead of buildings made of brick and mortar. “We are fortunate that a number of contractors are working hard to accommodate our schedule,” he said. A state prison that will house 334 prisoners in Navaso- ta is scheduled to begin accept ing inmates June 23. The Texas Legislative Bud get Board has also authorized construction of 6,300 temporary county jail spaces across the state. The Brazos County Jail has added a temporary facility to house 96 additional inmates. The jail currently has 290 beds, will be built to overcrowding The Department of Criminal justice was authorized to spend $168 million on the construction of 50 pris ons that would house 74,432 prisoners. "This demonstrates a commitment on the part of the leadership of our state to deal with the overcrowded prison situation." — Dick Lewis, spokesman for Texas Depart ment of Criminal Justice but has more than 500 inmates. Sergeant David Bishop, from the Brazos County Jail, said the new beds will not be able to accommodate all of the in mates, who are now sleeping on the floors. “It will help some,” he said, “but it will not alleviate the problem.” An architect is currently draw ing up plans for a facility that will house another 144 inmates. R. J. Holmgreen, a Brazos County judge, said the problem of prison overcrowding cannot be remedied by building more jails; but rather, the solution must begin earlier. “People are coming in faster than we can build new places for them,” he said. “We can’t just keep building more jails; we have to intervene early. We have to keep juvenile offenders from moving on to the deten tion centers.” Majority of rape victims underage Today's Bat Aggie! ife 3 Classified 4 Comics 6 Mail Call 5 Opinion 5 Reviews 4 State & Local 2 What's Up 6 Girls under 1 8 account for more than half of rapes WASHINGTON (AP) — Girls under 18 are victims of more than half the rapes reported to police, and the younger the vic tim the more likely that the at tacker is a relative or acquain tance, the Justice Department reported Wednesday. Girls under 12 are the victims in 16 percent of rapes reported to police, according to the grim estimates from the department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics. One in five rape victims under 12 is raped by her father. Both the statistics bureau and private experts said the ac tual percentages of underage girls raped are undoubtedly higher than these numbers gath ered from police reports because the younger the rape victim the less likely the crime is to he re ported to police. In separate data from 1991, the statistics bureau said family members or acquaintances ac counted for 96 percent of rapes of girls under age 12 in a three- state survey and for 94 percent in a survey of state inmates con victed of rape. The percentage of rapes by strangers increases as the age of the victims increases, which experts said reflects the more sheltered lives of younger females. “People tend to think rape happens to adults,” said FYofes- sor Dean Kirkpatrick, director of the Crime Victims Ftesearch and Treatment Center at the Med ical University of South Caroli na. “A good thing about this study is that it will help educate people that rape happens to chil dren and probably more often than to adults.” Young people are so frequent ly rape victims because “the youngest are the least likely to fight back and often don’t realize they are victimized,” said Karen Hanna of the National Victims Child rapes in the U.S. Reported rapes during 1992 and percentage of victims under age 18 in 11 states and the District of Columbia which kept such data. 221 Number of victims E&sa Percent under age 18 986 Please see Victims, Page 6 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics AP/Wm Schroeder