/ • February! 3 puzzle and not:j ited.” ms 56050111 ^leheadei ^ki Smith j Battalion M Softball Teaij eason today rail against SoufcJ arsityinSanMam ne is slated tois th a second ga: Hewing, o Evans said the La J to play SWT. ■'ti practicing for! so we are anxious iderway/’Evanssa .’n fun to get to k come together idy to test our si strengths and hi pefully, our gi iieip things star The Battalion olume 103 • Issue 91 • 12 P«ige$ The B«ill Online: http:// bat web.tamu.edu Wednesday, February 12, 1997 Students to vote on yell leader run-offs Ufter a petition was werified Tuesday, mudents will vote \on yell leader run off elections. fv Joey Jeanette Schlueter The Battalion Students will decide today "■ether or not to include yell 1 against South* der run-offs in the upcoming winning all i!|ection. |lf approved, a run-off election uld follow the general election. Students would then vote on the top five senior candidates and top four junior candidates. Currently, the top three seniors and top two juniors are chosen in a single election. A petition bearing 5,470 signa tures calling for a binding refer endum on yell leader run-offs was verified Tuesday with 4,815 valid signatures. Kevin Jordan, Student Govern ment judicial board chair and an accounting graduate student, said he expects a large voter turnout. “Any time Texas A&M students have a chance to voice their opin ion about something that affects them, they do,” Jordan said. Student Body President Carl Baggett said he does not want the election process to become a di- “ Whatever the students decide, we'll do everything in our power to abide by their votes." Chris Torn Head yell leader viding issue. “The Senate, among many oth er organizations on campus, has done so many good things,” Baggett said. “I just don’t want this to divide the students.” Chris Torn, head yell leader and a senior agricultural development major, said he is primarily against yell leader run-off elections. “For Corps and nonregs, run offs are not the best thing for yell leaders,” Torn said. “We are elect ed by the student body, and what ever the students decide, we’ll do everything in our power to abide by their vote.” Gary Kipe, yell leader and se nior agriculture development ma jor, said he is in favor of having yell leader run-offs and believes they will help the University. “This (the referendum) isn’t against anybody,” Kipe said. “It is for the whole student body.” Jason Waligura, Public Rela tions Officer for the Corps of Cadets and a senior petroleum en gineering major, said the reason there are no yell leader run-offs is the Student Senate. “Even though the student body supported it,” Waligura said, “the Student Senate stopped it and vot ed it down.” Students may vote today at the Commons, Sterling C. Evans Library, Wehner Building, Memorial Student Center and the Underground. RUN-OFF CRITERIA AT A GLANCE V Thetopfour junior candidates will advance to the run-off election. V The top five senior candidates will advance to the run-off election. V Any candidate receiving a major ity of the vote in the primary election will automatically assume the office without the run-off. V If more candidates receive a ma jority of the vote than there are po sitions, then the candidates receiv ing the highest number of votes will assume the offices. srm 09) 268-139(} ■HHfV HI r Friendly Face Pat James, The Battalion Shalena Poffenberger, a senior psychology major and member of the Diamond Darlings, hands out scorecards between the baseball games at Olsen Field Tuesday. ► MSC Council Churches observe Ash Wednesday 'asting, abstinence mark the traditional beginning of Lent i-lot p.m.), p.m.), ome. CP 017T 00, 'I By Graham Harvey The Battalion Churches and student organiza- )ns will observe Ash Wednesday, e traditional beginning of Lent, in ariety of ways today. Lent is the Christian season of eparation for Easter. Father Mike Sis of St. Mary’s tholic Center said that while Ash dnesday is not a required day of ss or a holy day of obligation, Ro- Catholics look fondly upon it. “It is a very popular day for tholics [with] a lot of personal aning.” Sis said. “It is a day of fast- ;, abstinence (from meat), and re- ntance of sin.” On Ash Wednesday, Roman Catholics wear ashes, a pre-Christ ian sign of repentance, on their fore heads in the shape of the Cross. There will be several Catholic ser vices today. St. Mary's will hold mass at 7 a.m., 12:05 p.m., 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. The Catholic Student Asso ciation will hold a service in the All- Faiths Chapel at noon and a service in Rudder Theatre at 5:30 p.m. Stavros Megas, secretary of the Orthodox Christian Fellowship and a senior history major, said Lent does not begin for members of the Ortho dox faith for about another month. The Orthodox Easter is on April 27, whereas the standard Easter falls on March 30. Megas attributes this to the split of the Christian church in 1055 between the Orthodox and Catholic faiths. “The Catholics changed the cal endar,” Megas said. Protestants also observe Ash Wednesday. The Rev. Mark Craw ford, chaplain for Episcopal stu dents, said the Episcopal observance of Ash Wednesday has English roots. The ashes used are obtained dur ing the Imposition of Ashes, a cere mony in which palm leaves from the previous Palm Sunday are burned. Crawford said the day’s service will include the Litany of Penitence, a re pentance ceremony authorized in The Book of Common Prayer, the Anglican code of procedure translat ed in 1549. “Ash Wednesday reminds us of our mortality, our human nature and the promise of salvation,” Craw ford said. As a historical note, Crawford said, the modern English word ‘Lent’ is derived from the Middle English word ‘lente,’ meaning ‘springtime,’ which itself is derived from the Old English word ‘lengten,’ meaning ‘the lengthening of days.' St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church will hold service at 7 a.m. There will be services at St. Francis Episcopal Church in College Station and St. An drew’s Episcopal Church in Bryan. St. Thomas’ will hold a special Ash Wednesday Service for college stu dents at 6 p.m. See Churches, Page 6 ire ant outbreak prompts control efforts 1.5pm Suiulsy apply- i Maria Benjamin Cheng The Battalion A booming fire ant population in Texas has ompted state research facilities, including Texas , to coordinate efforts to control the insects. The research institutions, which include e University of Texas and 'Xas Tech University, will an- unce the Fire Ant Manage- ent Plan at a press conference day in Austin. The institutions collaborated a bill to manage the fire ant Population. The bill, which asks $2.7 million per year for the sixyears, will be presented to e Texas Legislature during the ent session. A news release said fire ants ive infested 56 million acres of s, about two-thirds of the state. Dr. Bart Drees, an entomolo- ist with the Texas Agricultural Extension Ser- |ce, said the arrival of red imported fire ants m South America in the ’30s has led to the fire t overpopulation. “What's bad about them (fire ants) is that ere’s too many of them,” Drees said. The ants cause an estimated $300 million in “Most native ants are not as damaging as the red imported fire ants." Dr. Ray Frisbee Head, A&M entomology department losses in Texas each year, he said. Dr. Ray Frisbee, head of the A&M entomolo gy department, said a lack of natural controls caused the fire ant population to increase and displace native fire ants. “Most native ants are not as damaging as the red imported fire ants,” Frisbee said. Frisbee said part of the solution lies in reducing the fire ant popu lation, allowing native fire ants to recolonize their former territory. Drees said the Fire Ant Man agement Plan advocates a com munity-wide effort to control the fire ant population. “We can do a lot better job if we work together with neighbor hoods, homeowner associations or communities to coordinate control efforts,” Drees said in a news release. Frisbee said fire ants, unlike oth er ants, can inflict multiple stings. “A fire ant sting probably hurts as much as bee sting,” he said. “It’s usually a multiple num ber of [fire ants].” Frisbee said fire ants interfere with crop har vesting and pose a danger to the cattle industry. See Efforts, Page 5 Senior dedicated to A&M's 'living room' By Laura Oliveira The Battalion Nellson Burns first saw the MSC during a visit to Texas A&M Univer sity his senior year in high school. Now, a senior in college, he will as sume the position as MSC Council president beginning April 1. “I remember the MSC represent ing tradition and being a place where a lot of students came to gether,” he said. Burns, an international studies major, was appointed to the posi tion on Monday Feb. 3. Burns said through inclusiveness and team work, the MSC can remain the “liv ing room of the campus.” “I am very team-oriented,” he said. “If we can get different people with unique characteristics and strengths working toward the same goal and same vision, we can do a lot for the University.” Burns said community develop ment gives the MSC competition. He said activities such as going to clubs, playing laser tag and seeing movies at Hollywood 16 lure stu dents away from the MSC. “A&M is not what it was 20 years ago,” he said. “The MSC has to re main competitive in order to give the students what they want.” The MSC Council will take sur veys, establish focus groups and talk to organizations to get input on student needs. “We want to find out what the student body wants and give it to them,” he said. Burns will move into his new of fice when his term begins in April. Bums said he will have a picture of his parents when they were younger and a picture of them taken recently Ryan Rogers, The Battauon Nellson Burns, a senior international studies major, hopes to restore student focus to the MSC by serving as Council president. on his desk. He said looking at the pic tures puts life in perspective. “When I look at the younger pic tures, I see them as I am now,” he said. “And then I look at the other pictures and see who I want to be.” Burns has traveled to Europe five times through A&M programs and plans to study in Mexico this summer. He said he gains an understanding of different cultures when he travels. “Other cultures may go about doing something in a different way,” he said. “It is just as valid, but it is different. “Learning about this may pro vide insight as to how we can solve problems in our own society.” Burns said he wants to travel more after graduation and some day open his own business. Deputy chancellor devotes career to educational goals Rony Angkriwan, The Battalion Sherry Ellison, a technician in the entomology research lab, examines a fire ant nest that de veloped over a six-month period. By Brandon Hausenfluck The Battalion Dr. Leo Sayavedra, Texas A&M University System deputy chancel lor for academic institutions, is an example of how an education can change one’s life. Until he was 12 years old, Sayave dra, a Rio Grande Valley native, nev er set foot in a classroom. He, his five brothers and two sisters spent their childhoods working to supplement the family’s meager income. One day while Sayavedra was working on a farm, a truant officer approached him and asked why he was not in school. Sayavedra said working was the only life he knew. “At age 12, I had a regular job,” Sayavedra said. “I didn’t know I had to be in school. “There was a need for [everyone in the family] to contribute to the family income.” Ironically, Sayavedra made edu cation his career. Although he started the first grade when other kids his age were starting the seventh, he finished high school at 18 and went on to college. In 1960, Sayavedra received a degree in math ematics from Trinity University in San Antonio. He received a master’s degree in education in 1968 from North Texas State University (now University of North Texas). He went on to earn a Ph.D. in educational cur riculum and instruction at the Uni versity of Texas at Austin in 1976. Sayavedra has held a variety of positions during his career. For 12 years, he taught chemistry, physics and mathematics. During that time, Sayavedra coached high school football and basketball in Texas public schools and was a Universi ty Interscholastic League coach. Throughout his career, Sayavedra has been a member of nearly 30 pro fessional organizations. He served on the Texas Lottery Advisory Commit tee and the Advisory Committee for the Law School Admission Service and was the Policy Committee Chair man for the Hispanic Association of College and Universities. See Chancellor, Page 5 The Battalion INSIDETODAY PRO/CON: Yell Leader Gary Kipe and Student Senator Javier Martinez debate yell leader run off elections. Opinion, Page 11 Aggielife Toons Sports Page3 Page6 Page?