105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY today’s issue Toons 4 News 6 Battalion Radio Tune in to 90.9 KAMU-FM at 1:57 p.m. for details about the new senior-citizen apartments to be built in Bryan. TUESDAY June 1, 1999 Volume 105 • Issue 144 • 6 Pages College Station, Texas opinion • Parental liability laws react unjustly to recent incidents of school violence. PAGE 5 Bowen celebrates fifth year in office inng Currant no areas.] hat in 11 'nee con ArlenSpI to count at thel nal monl the Ena 1 the coir] MIKE RJENTES/Thf. Battalion Texas A&M security supervisor Bobby Richardson, Class of ’95, takes down an American flag on campus Monday afternoon. A&M security will assume the responsibilities campus flags until, the Corps of Cadets turns this fall. I r H omm to target youth violence ■ p BY VERONICA SERRANO The Battalion sife Residents of Brazos County and tirqunding counties areas are in- ifted to participate in a town-hall ^ftting on youth violence tonight jOr 6 to 8 at the First Baptist nlrch in Bryan. B,arry Johnson, president of the llJUege Station School Board, said : o igh recent events has caused e spotlight to shift to violence in \ Bool, community focus should i broader. “It’s [violence] not just confined to school,” Johnson said, “I see it as more of a societal aspect.” The forum will also be broad cast live on KBTX-TV. Jane Conoley, dean of the Col lege of Education and Collie W. Conoley, a professor of education al psychology, are two of the 10 panelists scheduled for the discus sion. Mr. Conoley said he and his wife host “Family Talk,” a radio show on KAMU-FM 90.9 and mat is one reason why they had been ap proached to join the panel. Mr. Conoley said he hopes peo ple will walk away with ideas about how they can make lifestyle changes to better the community. “[The program will help people figure] out what I need to do and what you need to do to make the world a better place,” Mr. Cono ley said. Mrs. Conoley said her research has focused on school violence and safety in schools, and her hus- see Forum on Page 4. BY CARRIE BENNETT The Battalion Texas A&M University President Dr. Ray M. Bowen celebrated his fifth anniversary yesterday. Walter Wendler, executive assis tant to Bowen, began the celebration by thanking Bowen for all he has ac complished and he discussed the “quiet and deliberate style” with which he leads the University. “Dr. Bowen faced challenging situations upon his arrival at Texas A&M,” Wendler said. Wendler said among the improve ments and programs Bowen has giv en A&M, he has stabilized working conditions for faculty and staff. He contributed resources to the construction of the George Bush Presidential Library Complex and helped obtain new resources for the Sterling C. Evans Library. Wendler said Bowen has been working to affiliate Texas A&M with the South Texas College of Law and also has worked to out line goals and events for Vision 2020. Wendler said the most impor tant thing Bowen gives to the Uni versity is character. “Character energizes an organi zation when it’s there and it petri fies the organization when it’s not,” Wendler said. Bowen was presented with a number of certificates and pre sents. Parking Traffic and Trans portation Services (PTTS) present ed Bowen with a proclamation making him an honorary A&M bus driver. Bob Wiatt, director of the Uni versity Police Department (UPD), made Bowen an honorary junior chief of the UPD. TERRY ROBERSON/Tm Battalion Charles Sippial Sr. (left), assistant vice president for Physical Plant, presents Texas A&M President Ray M. Bowen and his wife Sally with an animated picture of their dog, Lucy, eating an aluminum can. Dr. J. Malon Southerland, vice president for student affairs, pre sented Bowen with Bowen’s Corps of Cadets conduct record from 1954 to 1958 when Bowen was a student at A&M. Southerland also presented Bowen with three engraved dia mond-shaped emblems signifying the Deputy Corps Commander posi tion which Bowen held in 1958. Kevin Graham, mascot corporal and a sophomore general studies major, presented Sally Bowen with a framed picture of Reveille VI with her paw print on behalf of the stu dent body. Bowen closed the celebration by saying he has had an enjoyable time and many interesting experi ences in the last five years at A&M. “I don’t know how you describe the campus at Texas A&M,” Bowen said. “It’s a culture.” “A&M is the kind of university that takes care of itself and being a part of its community has been such a treat for Sally and me,” Bowen said. oundation readies for new home NEWS IN BRIEF BY RYAN WEST The Battalion Jesse Corrigan, project director for the con- itiction of the Jon L. Hagler Center, which will e the new home for the Texas A&M Founda- Ipn, said different Aggie traditions and sym- lism have been incorporated into the centers’ chitectural design. TThe Texas A&M Foundation is a private or- ization which provides scholarships to A&M Udents. j The building is set up to where the front en- ance has a narrow, individual focus that [idens as one walks through the building,” orrigan said. “This illustrates the larger focus at grows from individuals. It takes more than e person to make this university work.” [Corrigan said the building also plays a great Heal on light, which can be seen from the win 's and aluminum roof making up its’ exteri- j’The building will look like a sparkling gem gjfom the second or third deck of Kyle Field,” he Epil. ^Corrigan said the Hagler Center will not take lay from its neighbor, the Clayton Williams iimni Center. ■“We use complementary architecture so the lew building would fit in but not mirror its jpeighbor,” Corrigan said. “The highest point of IS Hagler Center is the same height as the Clay- IPn Williams [Alumni] Center.” "he Hagler Center is located across from the flfiyton Williams Alumni Center on the corner ff Houston Street and George Bush Drive, fs an incoming freshman, Marcelle Mallory, senior biomedical science major, was award- la $12,000 Presidents’ Endowed Scholarship |y the Texas A&M Foundation I “The Texas A&M Foundation has been like Special to The Battalion The Jon L. Hagler Center, shown here in an artist’s rendition, will house the Texas A&M Foundation. The center will be located across from the Clayton Williams Alumni Center on George Bush Drive. a family,” Mallory said. “As a freshman, it was an opportunity for me to meet other scholarship winners, just like me.” The Foundation matches each of its scholar ship winners with a donor. In Mallory’s case the donor was Texas A&M University President Dr. Ray M. Bowen and his family. “The Bowens have always made themselves available to me and any questions I might have,” Mallory said. “President Bowen and the A&M Foundation have gone out of their way to see to it that if I ever need any help I can come to them.” “The greatest single asset to the new building is the increased focus on the role of philanthropy,” Rose Anne McFadden, manager of communications for the A&M Foundation and Class of ’90, said. She said the Hagler Center will help raise the number of private donations from alumni and corporations. see Hagler on Page 4. Officials say higher interest rates help The Federal Reserve Board re cently announced it is considering raising interest rates to slow rapid growth of the nation’s economy. Of ficials at A&M’s Real Estate Center said contrary to what people may think, this could be good news for potential home buyers. In a press release, Mark Dot- zour, chief economist and director of research for the Real Estate Cen ter said if the Federal Reserve rais es rates, this might keep mortgage interest rates from increasing. "The Fed raises interest to keep the economy from overheating be cause that causes inflation.” he said. “Any efforts to keep inflation at low levels is going to be a posi tive thing for the mortgage market.” Dotzour said he expects first time homebuyers to have a more difficult time purchasing a home if the mortgage-rate increases. “[An increase] makes entry-lev el homes less affordable, so the lowest income segments of the home-buying market become priced out of the market,” he said. Bowman appointed engineering chair Dr. Charles H. Bowman, head of the Department of Petroleum Engi neering has been appointed to a five-year term as the inaugural hold er of the Robert Whiting Chair. The $1 million endowed chair was es tablished in December of 1997 in honor of Professor Emeritus Whit ing who was the longest serving pe troleum engineering department head. Bowman received master’s and Ph.D degrees in petroleum engi neering from A&M. He returned to A&M after retiring,as chairperson and chief executive officer of British Petroleum America Inc. Bowman is an advisory board member and senior advisor on en ergy for the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washing ton, D.C., and an honorary director of the American Petroleum Insti tute. Texas A&M to host leadership seminar A leadership conference offering information from nationally known leadership educators will be host ed by Texas A&M June 10 and 11. The conference is intended to mark the formation of the Texas As sociation of Leadership Educators. The director of the Center for Public Leadership Studies (CPLS) at the Bush School of Government and Public Service Arnold Vedlitz said the creation of the association will make Texas one of only six states to have such a state organi zation devoted to leadership edu cation. For more information or to reg ister for the conference, contact Tammi Caskey at 862-3857 or reg ister online at http://www.bush- school-tamu.edu.