K1 MH YEAR • ISSUE 69 • Inert lacoi man resources | artment to move edto as A&M Human Resources (HRD) will move in two n g, s fiom the YMCA Building to Research Parkway. )up I offices of benefits, com- ations, training/professional )pi”hent and retirement ser- wili move beginning Dec. 8. }up II offices of administra- imployee relations and in- 1 :ional services will move be- s , saii ig Jan. 5. Ices that are not moving are neft ifi|ation and compensation, reerWient, employee assistance 1!i ccupational health. s .ephone numbers have not n>i >eci for any of the HRD offices. |»pe ran police to offer ti-crime services I e Bryan Police Department’s K t Crime Apprehension Team will prig a crime prevention effort ■on to 6 p.m. Dec. 9-13. ie police will be engraving per- property, assisting to record >ers for identification, passing |me prevention information inswering questions about bur- and auto theft. jring each day, the officers will jt awards for different door Jand coupons. |ie team will be set up in a trail 's different location each day. ft. 9 — Winn Dixie at 4001 E. Ktreet. ft. 10 — Bryan Police Depart- , tat 301 S. Texas Ave. ft. 11 — D.K. Food Store at •9 W. Villa Maria. [•ft. 12 — Appletree at 2001 21 E. ■tee 13 — Wal-Mart Super- ter at 2200 Briarcrest. inton defines U.S. iclear-strike policy ,A J n A/ASHINGTON (AP) — Turning U.S. l '.. lear policy toward an emerging j ’ fat, President Clinton has decided ^ United States will consider using |. Dus i lear weapons against attackers ) hit American forces with chemi- ^ or biological weapons. The policy, made explicit in a clas- sipresidential directive, marks i administration’s first instruction e Pentagon shaping a nuclear itegy against the increasingly wor- )me possibility that nations such Iraq might turn chemical or biologi- arsenals against U.S. troops. A senior Clinton administration ad- gsaid Sunday the policy con- ms with two decades of White ise statements on the possible t use" of nuclear weapons. But it d3 presidential weight to the ing concern about “rogue ites” that has replaced the nuclear rror of the Cold War. Approved last month by Clinton, . incipal elements of the “Presi- ntial Decision Directive,” or PCI were reported Sunday by The ashington Post. JNSI! lifestyles All Things Aggie: Texas A&M prof pens books about Ag humor and other anecdotes. See Page 3 he Texas A&M Volleyball 3am advances to the f ICAA Tourney’s third round. tPl See Page 7 i!3 in ton uhnston: Misinformation, ackward knowledge displayed ta || today’s society. See Page 11 m line look up with state and na- ional news through The Vire, AP’s 24-hour online ' ews service. e x a s A&M University 12 PAGES COLLEGE STATION • TX , 4 65 53 TODAY TOMORROW See extended forecast. Page 2. MONDAY • DECEMBER 8 • 1997 PITS seeks solution for aging bus fleet Proposal would add 10 new buses each of the next five years By Amanda Smith Staffwriter As the Texas A&M Parking, Traf fic and Transportation Services (PTTS) tries to keep enough buses running to accommodate students, it faces the reality of an aging fleet that demands an increasing num ber of repairs. Gary lackson, manager for Bus Operations, said PTTS is examining options to address the problems of a large fleet that is growing older. “We have one of the largest university bus systems in the country,” he said. “We would like to buy 70 new buses total, but that would cost some $98 million. We are looking at other options now.” The current fleet includes 59 buses that transport students and faculty on and off campus. Students pay about $20 in service fees to pay for on-campus transportation. This money accounted for the $800,000 that PTTS received to help fund the bus fleet for the Fall ’97 semester. The off-campus revenue comes from bus pass sales and one-ride coupon sales and money allotted by PTTS at the fiscal year’s end, Jackson said. A bus pass for two semesters cost $110. “The idea is dial bus operations break down each year,” lackson said. “We have had nine major engine problems this se mester. The engines in the buses are like antiques. It takes money and time to replace them.” lackson said the aver age life expectancy of a bus is about 150,000 to 200,000 miles. He said 33 of the 59 buses are 1982 models, and many have as much as 300,000 miles, nearly twice their life expectancies. “We have gone beyond the life expectancy,” Jackson said. “I think that we will have to phase in buses slowly. The buses cost between $140,000 to $150,000 each.” In order to accommodate the needs of the students, PTTS is re viewing a proposal to phase in new buses over a five-year period by re placing 10 buses each year. A second option involves a lease- option agreement with a company outside the Texas A&M system. Jack- son said the lease-option may also in volve gradually replacing the buses. Jackson said a third and less likely option would be receiving permis sion for a bond package that would include financing the replacement of the entire Texas A&M bus fleet. Jackson said PTTS has consid ered increasing the student trans portation fee to help fund replace ment of the aging bus fleet. He said the fee could be as low as $35. “Even if students were to pay $35 a semester, they would still have to purchase bus passes,” he said. “For $50 a semester, the student would n’t have to purchase a bus pass. The other bonus is that the $800,000 of student allocation fees would be kept for other uses.” Tom Williams, the director of PTTS, said that increasing student transportation fees would make the system more convenient. “Our proposal to the administra tion will be that each student pay their fair share of the system,” he said. “It would make buses more available to dorm students who want to travel off- campus. It would be safer at night.” Please see Bus on Page 12. Branching out BRANDON BOLLOM/The Battalion | Tree vendor Daniel Hernandez drills Christmas trees Saturday in Bryan in I preparation of their sale. UT center ranks first among U.S. chaos labs AUSTIN (AP) —A University of Texas professor is proving that crayons are not just for children. Eric Weeks, a researcher at the Uni versity of Texas Center for Nonlinear Dynamics, recently used tiny beads of melted fluorescent crayons to simu late the jet stream’s movement around two aluminum mountain ridges bolted into a spinning tank of water with a video camera above it. Weeks, author of a report on the re search in a recent edition of the week ly journal Science, simulated what happens when the eastward-blowing jet stream is blocked by mountains. For most of the century, meteo rologists have suspected that high- pressure areas in winter occur when the jet stream moves into position to be blocked by mountains, or when there’s a combination of the blocking and a temperature influence. Weeks’ new finding indicates that the mountains are enough. “Our experiment shows they are a pretty good candidate by them selves,” said Weeks, a new Ph.D. at the nation’s premier graduate physics laboratory for the study of chaotic conditions. The blocking bends the jet stream toward the North Pole, cre ating the high-pressure area. That further blocks the jet stream, allow ing its winds to draw arctic air to ward Texas, he said. “They show it on the weather map as a big dip in the jet stream bringing the cold air south,” Weeks said. The spinning tank that Weeks used is a lab tool called a “rotating annulus.” It’s the pride of the dy namics center’s director, UT physics professor Harry Swinney. Swinney is an international leader in nonlinear dynamics, or chaos, a 30- year-old mathematical discipline that uses computers to search for univer sal patterns in seemingly random be havior in solids, fluids and gases. The field's focus ranges from help ing meteorologists get a better grip on weather predictions to aiding doctors in understanding the apparently er ratic beating of a diseased heart. Last year, the UT center was ranked first among the nation’s chaos labs by U.S. News & World Report magazine. Houston’s new mayor set to build on recent progress HOUSTON (AP) — The first person Lee Brown singled out for thanks in his victory speech was the man he replaces. When incumbent Mayor Bob Lanier vacates City Hall in January, he turns over America’s fourth-largest city to its first black mayor with the economy humming, crime down and a reasonably content citizenry. “When I raise my right hand to take the oath of office, I’ll have the good fortune to take the reins of a Houston on the move,” Brown, 60, said. Brown, who served as Houston’s police chief in the 1980s, edged 46-year-old businessman Rob Mos- bacher with 53 percent of the vote in Saturday’s runoff election. Mosbacher, who handles his family’s oil and gas busi ness, also had unsuccessful runs for U.S. Senate in 1984 and lieutenant governor in 1990. “Victory is not with us tonight, but we can be ex- ' tremely proud of our efforts and our accomplish ment and we can hold our heads high because we ran a great campaign and helped define the issues,” Mosbacher said Saturday night. Brown’s victory was not without considerable help from Lanier, whose political muscle shifted to Brown more than a year ago. Lanier was barred by term limits from seeking fourth term. Lanier’s supporters quickly went to work to raise cash, encourage a strong minority voter turnout and more important, dissuade other potential black candi dates from entering the contest. About 25 percent of Houston’s 1.8 million residents are black. About 31 percent of Houston’s registered voters cast ballots. Voter turnout patterns found that blacks com prised a third or more of the electorate while whites made up about 55 percent, the Houston Chronicle reported. Although early returns from Harris County, where most of Houston is located, showed Brown and Mosbacher split ting the votes, Brown was partially aided by capturing about 6,336 votes, or 94 percent, in outlying Fort Bend County. On Nov. 4, Brown broke out of an eight-candidate pack with 41 percent of the vote. Mosbacher followed with a distant 29 percent. Despite being consistently outfinanced by Mosbach er, the Lanier-Brown ma chine’s hard work resulted in a victory for Brown Sat urday night. The mayoral race be came the most expensive in the history of Houston, with campaign spending by the pair topping $5.6 million as of two weeks ago, the latest figures available show. Like Lanier, Brown focused his campaign on neighborhoods. While Lanier’s approach was more brick and mortar, embarking on a multimillion-dol- lar street resurfacing program and putting more po lice officers on the streets, Brown appealed to Hous tonians’ prized belief that they live in the most race-tranquil city in the nation. “Houston’s greatness lies not only in the bustling sky scrapers that reflect greatness, lies not only in the bustling skyscrapers that reflect this city’s economic might, but in the sprawling neighborhoods that represent the heart of the city,” Brown said. “Houston works best when Houston works together.” mmmMGmmmMsrnmmm., “When I raise my right hand to take the oath of office, PI} have the good fortune to take the reins of a Houston on the move.” LEE BROWN HOUSTON MAYOR-ELECT Russian officials seek cause of cargo-jet crash Saturday IRKUTSK, Russia (AP) — It was a quiet, bitterly cold afternoon on Grazhdanskaya Street, where a group of men chatted and smoked while tinkering with their battered cars. Many of their wives were out shopping. A teen-age girl sat by her living room window, puzzling over her chemistry homework. Suddenly, a roar shook her apartment building — and set her neighborhood on fire. “When I looked out the window I saw a burning car and a woman run ning out of another apartment build ing with her fur coat on fire. A man was lying on the ground,” Lena Meis- takhova, 15, said. “Then, a wave of heat came through the house.” A huge military cargo jet that seconds earlier had lifted off from an airfield a mile away slammed into No. 45 Grazhdanskaya on Sat urday, clipping an orphanage with its wing and demolishing one end of the five-story apartment building. Those who saw the crash talked of huge sheets of flames that en gulfed surrounding buildings. A day later, steam and smoke from burning fuel that had soaked into the ground was rising into the overcast sky. The An-124 Russian air force transport plane that crashed Satur day was carrying two jet fighters built at a local factory for export to Vietnam. The export was a rare bit of good news for the battered air- RUSSIA O Moscow Irkutsk, Detail area Vladivostok CHINA Pacific Ocean -Vietnam Indian Ocean 2,000 miles 2.000 km RUSSIA Irkutsk KAZAKSTAN 500 miles Site of plane crash ^ Lake • fiaykal MONGOLIA 500 km CHINA An-124 Length: 226 ft., 8 1/2 in. Wing span: 240 ft, 5 3/4 in. Speed: 537 mph Capacity: crew of 6, 88 passengers Type: Long-range heavy-lift four-turbofan freight transport craft industry in this Siberian city of 700,000. Ten seconds after taking off, the plane was in trouble. A woman who heard the shrill, ragged roar of the jet’s engines said it was leaning to one side, a wing tilting toward the ground. Then came a shattering explo sion. The plane, the size of a Boeing 747 jumbo jet, was carrying 100 tons of fuel in its tanks. There were 23 crew and factory staff aboard, es corting the fighters to Vietnam. Officially, the death toll stood at 62. It still may rise. Russian safety officials are baf fled by the disaster, and were inves tigating at least eight possible sce narios including contaminated fuel or a shift in the cargo. But Shoigu, the emergency situations minister, said there were few leads. Russia and other nations of the former Soviet Union have been plagued by deadly air crashes in recent years. Experts have blamed poor maintenance, safety viola tions and cost-cutting for persis tent problems.