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106 YEARS AT TEXAS
ION
IVERSITY
Inesday • October 13, 1999
College Station, Texas
Volume 106 • Issue 33 • 16 Pages
'omm to address questions
ibout A&M’s alcohol policy
BY BRADY CREEL
The Battalion
itudents with questions about Texas A&M’s
[hoi policy can find answers today at 7 p.m.
he MSC Flagroom at a program presented
tie MSC Issues and Ideas Committee,
the committee will present the program
Ixplain all current alcohol laws, rules and
Icies as they pertain to students,
fharlie Hemmeline, chair of MSC Issues
iIdeas Committee and a senior mechan-
: engineering major, said the program is
tgned not only to educate students about
Ling but to dispel myths associated with
and laws concerning the consumption
Jlcohol.
[We are not ' ere to condemn anyone,”
imeline said. “We just want everyone to
iw that this is the law.”
The program will feature a*panel of rep-
Ltatives from A&M, Student Judicial
dees, the Department of Residence Life,
I the University Police Department, all of
|om have experience with alcohol-related
K$and students’ misconceptions,
temmeline said each panelist will give a
linute talk relating the issues to their
(jartinents.
[â– [The panelists] are going to set the stage
presenting and answering the preliminary
festions," Hemmeline said,
dm Novak, Student Judicial Services co-
[inator and a panelist, said her part of the
rant will hopefully enlighten students as
vhat the University rules state about al-
U violation.
“Part of the focus will be to educate students
so they can make better decisions,” she said.
Novak said many students do not real
ize they can jeopardize their status as stu
dents and their abilities to hold leadership
positions.
Lorna Breault, first-year Student Alcohol
Education programs coordinator, said there
have been changes in the rules, specifically
concerning organizations.
The rules state that all membership re-
“We ar£ not here to
condemn anyone.
We just want everyone to
know that this is the iaw”
— Charlie Hemmeline
Chair, MSC Issues and Ideas Committee
cruiting shall be free of alcohol, and organi
zations must establish precautionary mea
sures to ensure that alcohol is not being
served to minors or people who appear to be
intoxicated.
Organizations are also prohibited from pur
chasing alcohol with the organization’s funds.
“Alcohol is an issue that everyone needs
to be concerned about,” she said.
Sue Foster, assistant director for Resi
dence Education of Residence Life and a
panelist, said she will speak about issues af
fecting students and alcohol in residence
halls. She said many students are unaware
of the rules concerning possession of alco
hol in the halls.
Foster said only students 21 years of age or
older may possess or consume alcohol in the
residence halls in their rooms.
She said residents may not may not store
large amounts of alcohol in their rooms and
underage students may not host residents who
are of age and choose to drink in their rooms.
Foster said residents old enough to drink
are also not allowed to have open containers
in public areas on campus.
The number of alcohol-related incidents
has increased since last year. Novak said
there were 251 students charged with alco
hol-related violations during the x 1998-99
academic year.
In the seven weeks since the campus re
opened Aug. 22, the University has already
charged and reprimanded close to 100 students.
Novak said University punishments can
vary, including expulsion.
She said all students charged are required
to take an alcohol and drug education class on
campus, regardless of whether they have to
take a class to satisfy local or state authorities.
Hemmeline said that after the panelists
make their presentations, a forum will allow
students to ask questions through panel
moderator Dr. Ted 'Stachowiak, associate di
rector of Student Counseling Service.
Novak said students should realize that
charges imposed by the University are sepa
rate from criminal charges, and the students
may have to face both.
“Many students know there is a rule but
don’t know about University reprimands, in
addition to criminal charges,” she said.
Special to The Battalion
Universities’ team
finds new asteroid
BY CARRIE BENNETT
The Battalion
Don Carona, a Texas A&M astron
omy instructor and program director
for the A&M observatory; Dr. Dan
Bruton, a physics and astronomy pro
fessor from Stephen F. Austin State
University (SEA); and Billy McCor
mack, an SFA student, discovered a
new minor planet, also called an as
teroid, orbiting the sun more than
180 million miles from Earth be
tween Mars and Jupiter.
The asteroid was discovered Oct.
2 while they were tracking a known
minor planet at the SFA observatory.
He said the team had been look
ing in the area where the asteroid
was found for three days before it
was discovered.
“We noticed a mover in the lower
right hand corner of the image,” he
said. “There is a general hope that if
we track one that’s already known,
there’s another-one close by.”
Carona said the problem with the
first spotting was getting definite data
to confirm that it was a new minor
planet from the image, so they looked
again Oct. 3.
Carona said during the second
spotting he and Bruton saw the as
teroid “plain as day” and sent their
information to the Minor Planet Cen
ter operated by Harvard University for
verification that the image was not
previously known. He said the center
sent the verification Oct. 6.
Carona and the team will have an
opportunity to name the discovery in
a few months.
“The temporary designation is
J99T04G,” he said. “A committee that
specifically deals with the Minor Plan
et Center has to approve the name, but
it’s pretty, rare that they reject a name. ”
Carona said it is not common for
a new stellar body to be discovered.
“When you take the total number
see Asteroid on Page 2.
Expressionism
vay
\INCS
'NMENJ
rinium
BRADLEY ATCHISON/The Battalion
Kevin Thompson, a freshman environmental design major, works on an “expression cube,” a cube designed
to represent a feeling that matches that of the creator, Tuesday at the Langford Architecture Center.
INC*de
Council debates feasibility
of Northgate-area garage
ielife
ccepting
naccep-
tance
omosexual
'students
pe with life at A&M.
Page 3
Sports
•Ags prepare for Kansas
fhe Aggies prepare to take on
L the Jayhawks on
'Saturday.
Page 11
Opinion
>ln the eye of
the beholder
New York
City Mayor’s
decision to revoke
...... funding for muse-
T| um sparks debate
Page 15
Batt Radio
I listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at
11:57 p.m. for an interview with
iband Cowboy Mouth.
Dean for a Day
participants
switch roles
BY BROOKE HODGES
The Battalion
For students enrolled in Agricultural
Education 340, Professional Leadership
Development, who hoped that one day
their professor would be replaced by
someone else, had their dreams come
true yesterday when their instructor won
the Dean for a Day contest.
Dr. Jane Conoley, dean of the College
of Education, volunteered her position as
dean for the day and switched places with
contest, winner, Dr. Chris Townsend, a
professor in the Department of Agricul
tural Education.
Conoley said teaching Townsend’s
class was comfortable because of her
teaching experience and familiarity with
the topic of leadership.
“I could see myself going back to being
a professor — I love that role,” she said.
Conoley said she met with Townsend’s
graduate student research team and met
with the Agricultural Education advisers.
as part of the day’s activities.
Townsend said the opportunity to act as
BY AMANDA SMITH
The Battalion
Another 725 parking spaces could be added to
the Northgate area, if the city of College Station
continues its’ plans for building a $6.8 million
parking garage.
The Northgate parking garage plans, which
were previously approved by College Station vot
ers in a referendum vote, will tentatively occupy
a 1.6-acre site just north of Church Street and
College Main.
Tom Brymer, acting city manager of. College
Station, said building the parking garage is a like
lihood as the end of the design and development
stage with DeShazo, Tang and Associates, Inc.,
an engineering and planning firm, nears.
“The feasibility analysis indicates that it is go
ing to be a financially viable project basically
funded by the users of the garage,” he said. “A
parking garage will have an impact on the North-
gate area.”
However, Dick Birdwell, a former College Sta
tion City Council member and an engineer, said
he is concerned that the parking garage will not
pay for itself and taxpayers will be left to pay the
remaining costs of the project.
“The forecasted revenue from the project has
been grossly overestimated,” Birdwell said. “1
am convinced it’s going to cost the taxpayers
money. They have not taken a good hard look
at the data.”
Brymer said DeShazo, Tang and Associates’
estimates indicate that the parking garage will
pay for itself in 18 to 20 years, based on estimat
ed fees for the parking garage.
ADD6T &OMAL 123
PARKINS SPACES
COST IS $ & 8
MILLION
OCCUPY l\ .j ACRES
NORTH OP CMtlRCH STREET
AND COLLEGE MAIN
â– H
JP BEATO/The Battalion
“You fine tune that until you open,” Brymer
said. “We will be sensitive to the economy.”
DeShazo, Tang and Associates estimates that
the Northgate garage will generate $2,072 per
space during the next five years, compared to the
$864 per space generated from the new Patricia
Street Promenade Lot during the past year.
In order to add the garage to the Northgate
area, the city must remove 50 percent of the on
street parking, a removal of 175 spaces.
Birdwell said he fears Northgate businesses
will suffer as a result of limited free on-street
parking forcing customers to go elsewhere.
“What is going to-happen is the businesses are
going to lose business,” he said. “People are go
ing to go to other places where they do not have
to pay to park.”
see Garage on Page 2.
Younts International Forum
examines U.S., China relations
ANTHONY DISALVO/The Battalion
Dr. Jane Conoley, dean of the College of
Education, took part in Dean for a Day.
the dean yesterday was a good experience.
1 “It was a very enriching experience for
me, and I learned deans must know a [great
deal] about a large organization,” she said.
Townsend said that when she arrived
yesterday morning, Conoley’s adminis
trative assistant, Mary Bauman, had her
whole day planned out for her.
Townsend said her day consisted
mainly of meetings with various people.
She said she met with regional education
technologists, advisers in the Department
see Switch on Page 2.
BY STASIA RAINES
The Battalion
The Kyle R. Younts interna
tional Forum will present a fo
rum on the economic and polit
ical progress in China and its
relationship with the United
States tonight at 7 in the Bush
Presidential Library Complex.
The forum, “China and U.S.
Relations: Global Stability For
the Millennium,” is sponsored
by the Institute for Pacific Asia,
the Center for International
Business Studies, the Lowry
Mays College of Business and
the China Club.
Dr. Julian Caspar, one of
tonight’s speaker and the director
of fhe Center for International
Business Studies in the Lowry
Mays College and Graduate
School of Business said this is an
appropriate time to hold the fo
rum because this year is the 50th
anniversary of communist China.
“I thought it would be inter
esting to update information on
where things are now,” he said,
“to look back and see what has
happened over the last 50 years
and where things are going. ”
He said the forum is an op
portunity to investigate how the
United States’ relationship with
China should be in the future.
“When you have the richest
democracy dealing with the
largest communist country,
you have opposite political
partnership.” Gasper said. “We
should think if a strategic part
nership is how we should go
into the future.”
Dr. Gabriel Carranza, direc
tor of the Institute for Pacific
Asia and director of the Latin
CHINA & U.S RELATK
Global Stability for the Millenium
Bush Library & Conference Center
Tonight
7 p.m.
JEFF SMITH/The Battalion
American Program, said rela
tions with China will greatly af
fect the future of the U.S. be
cause it is five times the
population of the U.S. and the
economy is improving daily.
“It can be our best ally or our
worst enemy,” Carranza said.
see U.S. on Page 2.