Texas A & M University %t TH YEAR‘ISSUE 135‘SPACES COLLEGE STATION • TX TODAY TOMORROW MONDAY • APRIL 27 • 1998 :ws Briefs instruction to lose lots PA-48, 61 Istruction will begin today on the ]>undation building, which will be Jon the corner of George Bush Dri- iHouston Street. The construction Jet people with red permits using Ifnd PA-61. Signs are posted indi hat parking is not appropriate in ifereas due to construction, which jieduled to begin on April 13. iry Wine, the associate director for ■stration of Parking, Traffic and iBrtation Services (PITS), said the ^Jction is two weeks behind sched- i;PITS officials recorded license plates 1 parking permit numbers on Friday, Jkingcounselors called and asked Is to relocate their vehicles. IS does not plan to relocate vehi- liay, unless otherwise directed. MC food area in larch of names pis summer, the 12th Man Burgers Racks food service area on the first “■‘Of the Memorial Student Center will /erted into a food court similar to Iderground, but with a decidedly in- lonal flare. (Besides all-American favorites like ■cue and fried chicken, there is a pro- sito offer Asian cuisine and south-of- wrder favorites. The individual brand- ■ts within this new area want to til their stores with "an A&M senti- pt’ The University’s Department of Services is now collecting possible is. names will be selected in June as jeimg of the area begins. The new lurt is expected to be open for the lester. Potential names should be -mailed or telephoned to Debbie ley, Department of Food Services, flop 1374, 845-3005 or . V acuity to work ?road announced pen Texas A&M faculty members Ceive funding for proposals to con- Jcholarly work abroad through the nal Research Travel Assistance ■administered by the Office of Inter- |ia! Coordination. Approximately 10 > of about $1,000 each are funded fall and spring. ring 1998 recipients and the coun- In which they will work are: Arman- Inzo, assistant professor of history, jndand Spain; Daniel Bornstein,as- |te professor of history, Italy; Tina , assistant professor of manage- lFrance and Poland; James Derr, as- ht professor of veterinary pathobiol- Nepal; Chester Dunning, associate ksor of history, the Netherlands, Ger- Britain and France; Daniel Ivray, professor of architecture, Italy; bn Maxson, professor of mathe- [s, Germany; John McEachron, pro- fr of wildlife and fisheries sciences, [alia; Paul Parrish, professor of Eng- England; Donald Saylak, professor nil engineering, Russia; and Hans lessler, professor of physics, Japan. INSIDE ,Jr. wraps up its spring ion with two performances he childrens’ play old’s Favorite Field Trip. See Page 3 fielder Will Gray overcame ersity to become a solid tributor for A&M baseball. lii- See Page 6 Daniel: Phone registra- i brings frustration and ential danger. See Page 7 p:/ /battalion.tamu.edu Dk up with state and na- lal news through The 'e,AP’s 24-hour online vs service. Yellow bikes to begin cycling Fall ’98 By Amanda Smith Staff writer Texas Aggies Making Changes (TAMC) is paving the road for a bi cycle transportation program set to begin in Fall 1998. The Borrow-a-Bike program will allow students to use bicycles from on-campus bike racks and ride them to classes or campus locations. Kristi Polasek, the co-director of the TAMC Borrow-A-Bike pro gram committee and a sopho more nutrition major, said she hopes students respond positive ly to the new program. “I am really excited about the new program, but I think that the stu dents must treat the bikes with re spect,” Polasek said. “A lot of people have bikes, but there are still a lot of people who don’t. Students who have bikes can still use those in the Borrow-A-Bike program.” Between 50 and 60 bikes will be numbered and painted yellow and placed in bike racks across cam pus, including West campus. Polasek said the committee hopes to receive 20 more bikes be fore the Fall 1998 semester begins. The Borrow-A-Bike committee has received more than 35 bicycles from Parking, Traffic and Trans portation Services (PTTS), the Bryan Police Department and the College Station Police Depart ment. The Brazos Valley Cyclists have worked to help members of the Borrow-A-Bike committee learn how to complete basic mainte nance repairs on the bikes, Po lasek said. Polasek said the Borrow-A-Bike committee is still discussing arrangements and the frequency of maintenance on the bicycles. Liz Fiagan, a member of TAMC and a freshman agribusiness ma jor, said she looks forward to the start of the program. “I think it’s a great program,” Hagan said. “I do not have a bike, and I live on campus. It will be nice to have bikes available and not have to worry about maintenance. It will also be nice for students who live off campus who won’t have to worry about leaving bikes on campus.” Cass Burton, an off-campus senator and a sophomore political science major, proposed the idea of a Borrow-A-Bike program to the Student Senate after initiating re search on the program as a fresh man in Fall 1996. “I am so excited about the pro gram,” Burton said. “I can’t get over how cooperative the admin istration has been. TAMC has made this program possible.” Living it up at A&M Right: Arin Schall, a junior political science major, gets her hair braided at Whoopstock ’98 Saturday afternoon. Far right: Linda Rodriguez, a senior electri cal engineer ing major, and Jose Ornelas, Class of ’94 graduate, dance in the Latin room at Ring Dance Saturday night. ■- \ wirnd’/M; in JAMES FRANCIS/The Battalion GREG MCREYNOLDS/The Battalion Turtles take hold in South Texas CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — A pair of rare sea turtles has turned up on a South Texas beach. What’s even more unusual — and encouraging — is that both Kemp’s ridleys turtles laid eggs. Saturday’s discoveries were a triumph for an ongoing federal program at Padre Island National Seashore to save the approximate ly 3,000 turtles that exist. “This job does require a lot of dedication and we have to put up with seeing a lot of dead turtles, but today we found two — nesting, no less,” Darrell Echols, branch chief of science and resources manage ment for the National Park Service, told the Corpus Christ! Caller- Times. “All I can think right now is that all’s well in the world today.” A beach visitor reported the first turtle at 9 a.m. on Mustang Island. The turtle team found it, watched it cover 93 pingpong-ball-sized eggs and caught it. Then they heard the re port of the second turtle, discovered by two turtle patrollers. Scientists placed the two tur tles’ eggs, 190 in all, in incubators and captured the turtles, said Donna Shaver, a U.S. Geological Survey research biologist who di rects the Kemp’s ridley recovery program. Shaver’s team drew blood from the two turtles, tagged them, placed satellite transmitters on them and set them free. Each weighs 80 to 100 pounds. The transmitters will keep track of the turtles, and the group may be able to claim another bunch of eggs if the turtles return to shore. One of the two turtles was from the 13,500 that have been raised in captivity and set free through the federal program, Shaver said. Its tag showed that it was born in 1984. The other had no tag and may have been born in the wild, she said. Katy team takes decathlon silver PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — A team of California high school students Sunday were saved from having to eat loads of canned Spam by winning the U.S. Academic Decathlon. El Camino Real High School ofWoodland Hills, Calif. ,beat out 57 other high schools to win the prestigious competition in which teen-agers from across America are tested for their knowledge. “It’s the greatest feeling on earth,” said 17-year-old Steve Chae, a jubilant member of the California team, which placed second in last year’s national champi onship. “The one thing we came back for was the na tional title, and we did it.” Defending champion James E. Taylor High School of Katy, Texas, came away with the silver medal this year. “We didn’t lose the gold. We won the silver,” said Tay lor’s Cheryl Hogan, 18. Mountain View High School of Mesa, Ariz., was third, followed by the Wheeler School of Providence, R.I., and the Whitney Young Magnet School of Chica go, Ill. The California team spent as much as 50 hours a week preparing for the contest. They were hungry for victory, but not for the stack of canned Span they had pledged to eat if they won anything less than the gold medal. “We don’t have to eat the Spam,” 17-year-old Elena Pelman said after her team’s victory. Wheeler’s fourth-place finish was the best ever for a Rhode Island team at the nationals. The Wheeler team also scored higher than any other Northeast school, won a medal for the best performance of a small school, and walked away with a total of 11 individual medals. “I’m ecstatic. This is more than we possibly could have hoped for,” said 17-year-old Megan von Reinhart. Each year, a special award is given to the Academic Decathlon competitor who has overcome the greatest adversity. That award — and a $3,000 scholarship — this year went to Levon Camp, a Tennessee teen-ager who once belonged to a gang and who used to be so unruly that his teachers liked it when he played hooky. Catholic center opens Saturday By Rachel Dawley Staff writer More than 1,000 people gath ered in the courtyard of St. Mary’s Church Saturday for the dedica tion of the new Catholic Center, which will be home to the Catholic Campus Ministry at Texas A&M University. Bishop John McCarthy of the Diocese of Austin and Archbishop Patrick Flores of the Archdiocese of San Antonio celebrated a Mass at St. Mary’s at noon and a Rite of Blessing of the new complex was held after the Mass. Twenty-five priests and 12 dea cons from around the world were present for the dedication. Father Mike Sis, director of cam pus ministry at St. Mary’s Catholic Center, called the dedication “an historic moment for the Catholic Church, for Texas A&M University and for the future of our society.” Peter de Keratry, development director for St. Mary’s, said the 30,000-square-foot center in cludes a small chapel, classrooms, meeting rooms, an expanded li brary, a student lounge area, three conference rooms, several study areas and an administrative suite. An adjacent activity center also in cludes a commercial kitchen and a large dining space. De Keratry said the center is open to the entire community, not just Catholic students. The $4.9 million facility was completed through the church’s “Building a Tradition in Faith Campaign,” which received do nations from current and former students, foundations and friends of St. Mary’s from all over the world. The campaign was ini tiated in 1994 and completed in February of this year. Jenny Koons, president of the St. Mary’s pastoral council and a senior English major, said there are cur rently 10,000 Catholic A&M stu dents and 4,000 participate in St. Mary’s Mass. Koons said the new center will cater to the 40 student organizations within the church. “The new center is beautiful,” Koons sajd. “We tried to design a space that is accommodating both with meeting rooms and leisure space.” Koons said St. Mary’s activities affect the community and the new center will allow a stronger out reach program. “We are working hard to im prove our community programs,” Koons said. “Now we have a bigger space to plan. The new center helps us coordinate our efforts.”