The Battalion alume 103 • Issue 23 • 10 Pages Wednesday, October 2,1996 The Batt Online: Bat-web@tamu.edu oving one ^4 fresh man female enrollment climbs Jo flights gf till Set ■11698 SI.) for appt. only • Matrix air) ?V/Cf tek repair stock repair epair 2 order 31/96 Texas Ave. an, Texas 5-3596 for 1 for the pricel this coupon! st Tables, Drink Prices )est Pool Rati i. Come Play | mly pool hi lorthgate. 10/31/96 >n Belt on 5 th. By Carla Renea Marsh The Battalion The women in the Class of ’00 lutnumber their male class- nates, marking the first time in I'exasA&M’s history that men ]rein the minority. Fall figures reveal there are ,243 freshman women and |,144 freshman men enrolled It A&M. Gary Engelgau, executive di lector of admissions and pcords, said the freshman fe- nale enrollment has slowly in- (teased since women were first dmitted to A&M in Fall 1963. “Another milestone has been passed,’’ Engelgau said. Anna Bell Harvey, Class of ’67, was one of the first 11 women admitted to A&M. Harvey said the women were required to sign a contract stat ing they would withdraw from the University if A&M reversed their decision to admit women. “I didn’t realize the impact it had back then,” Harvey said. Harvey said women were ei ther loved or hated by the staff and students, but she has no regrets. See Freshmen, Page 10 mountain at a time Graduates find 'glass ceiling’ in some career fields By Courtney Walker The Battalion More women are entering careers traditionally dominat ed by men, but some feel they face a glass ceiling that limits their progress. The George H. Gallup Interna tional Institute polled 1,000 se niors from 88 national colleges and universities. The survey, commissioned by the Graduate Management Admission Coun cil, found men and women per ceive their opportunities in the workplace differently. Kristin Cotrell, a junior psy chology major, said men have more career opportunities avail able to them. “Men get the higher salaries and have more opportunities, but women want it more and work harder, which is why they get so frustrated with the glass ceiling issues,” Cotrell said. “It’s like women are second best and if a man can’t get the job or promotion, then the women can have it.” But Teresa Williams, a senior marketing major, said women can overcome the glass ceiling if they have the right mind set. “I am entering a field, myself,that is mostly men deal ing with other men,” Williams said. “Whether I like the situation or not I have to accept and deal with it. I don’t go into a situation with a mind set that I have to act different or prove myself. I just treat everyone equally whether they’re male or female.” Michael Haack, an engi neering graduate student, said the glass ceiling is fading. In his two internships with engi neering firms, Haack said, 25 to 30 percent of his superiors were women. See Career, Page 6 - Saturday i. - 6:00 ps I sed! lug ionanza Dave House, The Battalion Anna Rodriguez, a senior elementary education major, shows off her pet walk ing stick. Students in Dr. Gold’s entomology class raise a bug for 30 days while observing their daily behaviors. After the project is completed, the bugs are re leased into the wild. Freshmen pick leaders By Marissa Alanis The Battalion The Class of ’00 went to the polls Tuesday to determine which candidates will lead the freshmen through their first year at Texas A&M. Jason Jaynes, election commis sioner and a junior computer sci ence major, said elections are a stepping stone for freshmen. “It’s a footstep in the door for their future at A&M,” Jaynes said. The elections brought eight days of campaigning by 85 can didates to a close. Candidates visited residence halls and distributed fliers across campus. Some candidates even wore T-shirts to promote their campaign. Sarah Vanya, a freshman general studies major, said the more she knew about the candidates, the more likely they were to receive her vote. Fliers with candidates’ pic tures on them were ineffective, Vanya said, although others may not agree. “I would want to know the per son,” Vanya said. “I don’t think the picture is going to tell you enough about someone.” Craig Reynolds, a freshman presidential candidate and a me chanical engineering major, said freshmen are enthusiastic about elections but this is no indication of voter turnout. “Freshmen are pretty excited about electing officers,” Reynolds said. “But I don’t know if people are excited about the idea of voting.” Reynolds said running for of fice at A&M is different than in high school. A&M’s large student body, Reynolds said, makes it is impor tant for candidates to increase their visibility. “As freshmen, the name of the game is recognition,” Reynolds said. Jaynes-said reaching the large constituency in only eight days of campaigning is challenging. Election results were an nounced at 7:30 a.m. in front of the Sul Ross statue. Victory in each office was awarded to the candidate that won with a majority of the votes. A run off election will be held if there was no majority vote. Voting for run-off elections will take place Oct. 8 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the same polling locations. Dave House, The Battalion Steve Farnham, a freshman pe troleum engineering major, votes in the Underground. Mideast talks to resume Israel rejects firm date on pullback suggested by U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) — Amid tensions and suspicion inflamed by Mideast violence, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat shook hands at a White House summit Tuesday and held lengthy face-to-face talks. After three hours, the discus sions recessed on a cordial note, the White House said. The crisis- shrouded meeting helped dispel a mood of mistrust but did not resolve major differences, offi cials said. The talks will resume Wednesday. “We’ve come a long way in the last three years,” President Clinton said as he sought to build on a 1993 peace accord between the two sides. “No one wants to turn back.” Netanyahu said they had come together “to try to put the peace process back on track,” af ter last week’s violence left 76 people dead. He said he was ab solutely committed to the 1993 agreements, which include the promised redeployment of Israeli troops away from Arabs in the West Bank town of Hebron. However, Natan Sharansky, an Israeli cabinet officer, said Israel had rejected, as impossible, an American request for a specific date for the troop pullback. “We say to commit oneself to a date is to create a built-in pos sibility of the talks breaking down,” Sharanksy said. Further, Sharansky said Israel would not reverse Netanyahu’s opening last week of a second entrance to a tunnel that winds around the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, which has shrines sa cred to Muslims and Jews. The opening triggered the worst gun battles between Palestinians and Israelis since the 1967 Mideast war. The White House said the Ne- tanyahu-Arafat talks went “a long way towards re-establishing that notion of trust that must exist be tween the parties.” R.M.tl IE Battalion TODAY 4-DATE ew dateline opens love connection students seeking panionship. Aggielife, Page 3 % i hat If? 1. Slocum and the lies ponder what son record would be hout the mistakes. Sports, Page 7 3eSSiO! itranced s customers ■n per custonf' -s 10-15-96 iley: People blindly ow traditions at University and fund the world . . Opinion, Page 9 Ross Street construction options under consideration By Wesley Poston The Battalion Ross Street is caving in and Texas A&M University offi cials have blocked part of it off to investigate reconstruc tion possibilities. The westbound lane of the street, which runs from North- gate to the Administration Building, is closed from the cor ner of the Sid Richardson Build ing to the Bus Stop Snack Bar. Tom Williams, Parking, Traffic and Transportation di rector, said the westbound lane was blocked because of safety concerns. “We felt it was not safe to drive on that side,” he said. “There were chunks of concrete coming up. We closed it and we put the barriers up.” Dick Williams, associate di rector of facilities for the Physi cal Plant, said the first issue is student safety. “The next step is hiring an architectural engineering firm to tell us what the best options are,” he said. Dick Williams said the Uni versity is faced with three op tions for the street. It could be left the way it is, repaired mini mally or fixed completely. “Each of those considera tions has a cost,” he said. The decision will have to weigh the benefit of each action against the cost of proceeding, he said. David Godbey, assistant di rector of engineering and de sign services for the Physical Plant, said plant officials have outlined a plan for the project. “Our next step is to sit down and make up a short list of en gineering firms to consider for the job,” he said. Godbey said a Houston company has studied the street using ground-penetrat ing radar. The radar detected “numer ous anomalies,” which Godbey said are areas of erosion from 3 to 12 inches deep. Godbey said the erosion was probably caused by rain water and faulty utility lines under and around the street. “[But] what caused it is not as relevant as what we have to' deal with,” he said. Tom Williams said PTTS has considered closing the street permanently. “We’ve done a traffic study and a traffic plan and we know that Ross Street isn’t needed in our [transportation] system,” he said. “The buses actually work better the way we have them now (routed around Ross Street).” He said an increase in pedestrian traffic around Sbisa Dining Hall and the Bus Stop Snack Bar make closing Ross Street an option that could im prove campus safety. The area could be made into a “pedestrian only” area, Tom Williams said. But Dick Williams said re stricting vehicles would solve only part of the problem. “No matter what we did on top, there would still have to be something done under neath,” he said. “Whatever caused the failing now appar ently would still have to be addressed.” * Stew Milne, The Battalion The westbound lane of Ross Street is closed from the Sid Richardson Building to the Bus Stop Snack Bar.