mi umuf** 1 V' Texas A & M University 1 r 7 97 pi • . J Tomorrow B Today See extended forecast, Page 2. s olume 103 • Issue 165 • 6 Pages College Station, TX Wednesday, July 16,1997 lorrec Jews Briefs [they! OrpS to host first g lunion celebration I former members of the Texas A«&M rps of Cadets will gather at the first fps of Cadets Reunion this fall. ^The reunion will take place in con- etion with the A&M-University of uthwestern Louisiana football “jfneon Sept. 20. IheCorps celebration will begin with current Corps’ practice march-in at m. at Kyle Reid. Other activities in- ares (le open house in the dorms, pro ms and displays at the Sam Hous- Sanders Corps of Cadets Center. The Texas Aggie Band will hold its , wal reunion the same weekend, not ob iculty Senate OKs search program The Texas A&M Faculty Senate mimously approved the Research lolar Program Monday. The program encourages students - participate in research projects and Ijlll Msh their findings. Students com ing the program will be recognized aiesearch scholar at graduation cer- lonies and on official transcripts. (program will begin in the fall. In other business, the Faculty Sen- eapproved a name change from the (Mays College of Business Ad- inistration and Graduate School of jsiness to the Lowry Mays College KlGraduate School of Business. ngci- Iwoti I, part ’olitical Forum hosts ampaign speaker SuzyWoodford, the executive direc- irofCommon Cause Texas, will discuss finance reform, conflict-of-in- ^estissues and public information ac- 'ssat4p.rn. today in Rm. 230 MSC. TheMSC Political Forum is spon ging the free event. Common Cause fights to open vernment meetings and records to public and prevent unpublicized %k-deal legislation. ury rules in favor (former executive MILWAUKEE (AP) — A jury award- 1126.6 million Tuesday to a former % Brewing executive who sued ecompany for firing him after he scussed a racy episode of “Sein- I’with a female co-worker. Jerold Mackenzie was fired from 195,000-a-year job in 1993 after told Patricia Best about the •sode and she complained. Mackenzie said he was relieved by verdict. You should be able to talk to your wkers. You should be able to talk subordinates as you would talk to 'body else,” he said. Miller will appeal, spokesman ikeBrophy said. ingers President Tom theiffer discusses the future major league baseball. See Page 3. OPINION ONLINE ^p://bat-web.tamii.edu 'ok for fevious 'ttalion Tories in le archives. Academic Building repairs to begin Weathering, age have caused deterioration . ; By Robert Smith The Battalion The Academic Building will under go repairs for exterior holes starting the first week of August. The building’s stone enclosure that lies just below the copper dome will be replaced. The enclosure has been steadily deteriorating and has several cracks and large holes. Rick Thomas, an informant of maintenance, said weathering and age have made repairs necessary. “The fact that it is an old building has caused it to deteriorate,” Thomas said. The Physical Plant planned this maintenance on the Academic Build ing in September 1995. Thomas said repairs have been de layed due to a lack of allocated funds. “It’s been on deferred maintenance for over a year, and we’re just now getting the money to work on it,” Thomas said. David Godbey, assistant director of the Physical Plant for Engineering and Design Services, said the project will be complex. “It’s pretty involved,” Godbey said. “They have to erect a scaffold to remove the old blocks one at a time and replace them with new ones that match the sur rounding blocks exacdy.” Godbey said the project has a min imum cost of $79,185. “That is the bottom line cost,” God bey said. "There may be more damage than what we can see right now, and it could be more.” Godbey said he expects the repairs to be completed in four months. The building’s most recent major repairs were done in January 1994, when the original wooden window frames were replaced with alu minum frames. The Academic Building was con structed in 1912 and is one of the old est buildings on campus. The building lies on the same ground once occupied by A&M’s Old Main Building, which burned down in 1911. Godbey said the repairs will signif icantly improve the appearance of the building. “That part of the building is pretty worn down right now,” Godbey said. “When everything is done, it will look like it did when it was first built.” \ H it Mjy : n w