THE Tuesday. February;; ics, and Coptic Ortfro ouda III. The visits a light on the tense veen Egypt’s Mi )pts, the largest relign an estimated lOperu lillion population. >ets sold tg an compan JRT, Germany (AP) 'in’ gruen. he Frog and Miss Pig ng the latest Americj German, following ini ’ Chrysler Corp. andfo aased media compa Merchandising is buy* son Co. for $680 mil stock, giving it exck® ch fuzzy critters asKe l, Miss Piggy, Berty e sc raggly green furbs rouch. WEDNESDAY February 23, 2000 Volume 106 ~ Issue 97 14 pages \ * I ftih'lk'J II Commission requests more time, money BY ROLANDO GARCIA The Battalion An exhaustive interview process and insurance pre miums for the consulting firms are driving the cost of the bonfire investigation past the $1 million mark, in vestigators said. The Special Commission on the 1999 Aggie Bonfire Collapse met Tuesday to as sess the progress of the accident inquiry and were informed that the investigation team, composed of four engineering and consulting finns, would also need an ex tension of the March 31 deadline. “Clearly, we’ll need additional funds to complete the investigation, but there’s a few un certainties preventing us from having an exact fig ure,” Jon Zagrodzky, co-chief of staff to the com mission said. “The final deadline will slip by weeks, not months. The nature of investigation and research is such that future work is difficult to plan and find ings can extend schedules.” Zagrodzky added he would present more precise budgeting and timeline information to the commission later this week. “Our team has been quite frugal in their approach to this when you look at the complexity of the task,” Commission Chairperson Leo Linbeck, Jr. said. "We all wish this investigation could be completed faster, but our goal is to find the truth of what happened, and we cannot jump to conclusions with quick answers.” Additional funds for the investigation must be ap- ( proved by the Texas A&M Board of Regents. Among the factors fueling the need for more money, Zagrodzky said, were the premiums for insurance poli cies that would cover the legal expenses of the firms if they are called to testify or give depositions in accident- related lawsuits. Investigators had planned to conduct at least 250 in terviews, but that figure could balloon to 400 or more. “If there’s a new lead, we have to follow up with an interview, and that adds time and cost,” Zagrodzky said. Kent Lietzau, co-chief of staff to the commission, delivered progress reports from the four teams work ing on the investigation to the commission. Fay Engineering, which was tasked to study the his torical design of bonfire, has compiled the specifica tions, such as stack dimensions, log strength and den sity, and rope tension, from recent bonfires. “They’ve been able to construct a composite design as to how bonfire should have been built,” Lietzau said. Packer Engineering reported that they have com pleted a comprehensive examination of centerpole, the log at the center of the bonfire stack that served a crit ical support function, by evaluating the quality of the wood and analyzing the fracture points. Packer has also collected samples of the soil at the bonfire site. In particular. Packer will be looking at the soil around centerpole and the four perimeter poles. In the coming weeks. Packer will complete the soil analysis and will review interview reports and docu ments to reconstruct precisely what occurred immedi ately before and during the collapse. Performance Improvement International (PII), a firm hired to examine the human factors that may have contributed to the accident, is continuing its study of documents, interview reports and the procedural manuals students used to build bonfire. All the infor- “ mation Pll collects will be entered in a database, Lietzau said, and will then be verified before the data is en tered in a separate data base to be shared with the other teams. “We won’t just take the information at face value. It will have to be validated and corroborated by other ev idence before we draw any conclusions,” Lietzau said. Kroll Associates is in the process of Conducting inter views, and has so far completed nearly 100 interviews. Among those present at the meeting was Dominic Straus, a sophomore agricultural business major who was injured in the bonfire collapse. He said he attent- ed the meeting because he was curios to see how the investigation was progressing. Straus, who has already returned to classes, suffered tom muscles on his upper ann, shoulder and chest, and is still undergoing treatment. While he is taking a wait-and-see attitude toward the investigation, Straus did not hesitate to share his thoughts on the future of bonfire. “I’m looking forward to see the tradition continue as a memorial to those who died,” he said. Thompson, RHA meet BY RICHARD BRAY The Battalion Bonfire yellow pot and crew chief positions will not exist until the investi gation into the cause of the 1999 Aggie Bonfire Collapse has concluded and decisions have been made about the fu ture oi’bonfire. Bonfire adviser Rusty Thompson will speak to the Res idence Hall Associa tion lRHA] during the RHA meeting Wednesday night about a temporary hold on planning for a bonfire next year. Thompson said bonfire organizers are waiting now for the decision to be made as to whether bonfire will actual ly be held next year. “We just want to make it clear that we do not have any plans for Bonfire 2000,” he said. “We are acting as if there is not going to be a bonfire next year until we hear otherwise.” THOMPSON RHA will also be discussing the pos sibility of bringing the College Televi sion Network [CTN] on campus. The CTN is a television-program ming option available to college cam puses free of charge. It consists of music videos, news from CNN, commercials and announcements for upcoming events on campus. Tara Gray, the R1IA vice president for programs, said RHA will vote on CTN’s use on the campus. Gray said that if RHA approves CTN, it must still be approved by oth er organizations on campus. “Our approval is not going to be the deciding [factor] that brings it on cam pus,” she said. “It still has to go before MSC Council and the Student Govern ment Association.” The channel consists of about 40 minutes of music videos, five minutes of news, eight minutes of commercials and one minute of campus announce ments every hour. CTN cyrrently reaches 700 colleges and universities and 1.7 million students each dav. l l Hot jnt. i.-9 p.m.), 30 p.m.) Cash 17 •a.) irly. cp oi?, c ooi7 experiment alance itation lignment 33-8575 McCain wins in both primaries DEf ROIT(AP) — John McCain thumped George W. Bush in a two-state sweep Tuesday night, rallying a “new McCain majority” of independents and Democrats in Michigan and winning his home state of Arizona to seize momentum for a two- week blitz of Republican primaries. “Asl look more electable, we’ll start drawing more Republicans,” McCain, who received just one fourth of the GOP vote, said in an interview with the Associated Press. “What 1 believe we are assembling is the new McCain majority.” 1 lumbled by defeat, the Texas governor said, “This is a marathon and I ’m going to be in it all the way to the end — and some primaries you win and sometimes you don’t.” McCain’s is the latest victory in a see-sawing Republican nomination race. The Arizonan won New Hampshire’s leadoff primary in a landslide, lost fhe followup showdown in South Carolina and won Michigan by a narrow margin. In each case, Bush and McCain forged mirror-image coalitions: Bush with an overwhelming majority of bedrock Republicans and McCain reaching outside the party fora similar-sized force of Democrats and independents. Open to all comers, Michigan’s primary actually drew more non-Republicans who outnumbered Republicans. Bush supporters bitterly dismissed McCain’s victory. “John McCain isn’t party building, he’s party-borrowing,” said three-term Michi gan Gov. John Engler, who accused the senator of “renting Democrats” for the night. Englerhad promised to carry Michigan for Bush, and took blame for the defeat. McCain won all of Arizona’s 30 delegates with his victory there. His statewide victory in Michigan earned him 10 at-large delegates, with the remaining 48 dele gates to be allocated according to the winner of each congressional district. Interviews with voters as they left polling places showed that more than half of the Michigan voters were non-Republicans — independents and Democrats who voted in far larger numbers than in 1996. Three-quarters of McCain’s vote came from the non- Republicans, and three-quarters of Bush’s vote came from bedrock Republicans. Voter News Service, a consortium of the Associated Press and television net- gorks, conducted the interviews. In a whirlwind 48 hours after the South Carolina primary. Bush and McCain trad ed accusations of negative campaigning in Michigan. Each complained that the oth- erwasusing automated phone calls to voters to make inflammatory religious attacks. The negative talk did not turn off voters, who showed up in far higher numbers than in 1992 and 1996. Safe GUY ROGERS/Thi Bai iaijon A&M freshman centerfielder, David Evans slides into second base during the baseball game against Sam Houston State University Tuesday afternoon. The Aggies lost 2-1 to the Bearkats. Refer to story on page 9 for more details about the game. Fair shows off-campus living Pl iBl ir ' AN candidates Housing event invites property owners, students INSIDE Michigan and Arizona Primaries BY BRADY CREEL The Battalion For Amber Smith, a sophomore psychology major, the deci sion to come to Texas A&M led to another decision facing all in coming freshmen and transfer students—“Where should I live?” Every semester, students like Smith face the question of whether to live in a residence hall or off-campus. Students will have a tch rs lips) ipted. 707 Texas Ave. | Bryan 822-2141 John McCain Gt&rqt W, iuth Alan K@yw Michigan 49% 45% 4% Arizona Won all delegates — — RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion Bush drew fewer number of bedrock Republicans than in South Carolina. Mc Cain’s mixed breed of voters — blue-collar economic conservatives, union mem bers and Baby Boomers — voted in far larger numbers. His coalition was reminis cent of the voters who put Ronald Reagan into the White House then became a battleground for Democrats and Republicans in subsequent presidential elections. McCain did better among veterans than in South Carolina, and appeared to have greater success convincing voters that he was the race’s true reformer and straight talker. In addition to his success among Democrats and independents, McCain earned the support of an overwhelming percentage of new voters, two-thirds of the people who had never before participated in a GOP primary. In the Michigan battleground, McCain supporters said they liked him because he stood up for his beliefs. In exit polling, they split their top issue between Social Se curity and moral values. Bush voters were younger, more affluent, anti-abortion and strongly conserva tive. They cited his conservative values as their top reason for voting for him. Reli gious right voters also preferred Bush. Four in 10 voters said both candidates attacked unfairly, though the bickering seemed to leave Michigan voters with a more negative impression of Bush than Mc Cain. That is a reverse of polling from South Carolina. —ift l bodi itowi 1 It a lit 9 month chance to look at Housing options at the sixteenth an nual Housing Fair, being held in the MSC from 9:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. Over 50 property own ers will be on hand to rep resent over 80 apartment complexes and other hous ing choices in Bryan-Col- lege Station. Jennifer McReary, coor dinator of Off-Campus Stu dent Services, said staff from Off-Campus Student Services will be available to assist students who are looking for housing. The new 2000 Off Campus Living Manual will also be available. Smith said she enjoyed her freshmen year in Legett Hall, but her decision to ultimately move off-campus in College Sta tion was decided by the offer of easier access to restaurants and shops while still being near campus. “You feel like you are part of a college life because you are here in the middle of everything — and it is central,” Smith said. o 11 * c a m p us firyan o . . fiof) One question many students are concerned with is the lo cation of their residence — “Should I live in Bryan or College Station?” Smith said she chose to live in College Station and, although it is notably more expensive than living in Bryan, she said the close proximity to campus and greater feeling of safety justi fied the additional living expense. “I feel safe when 1 go out to run at midnight because it is all college students,” Smith said. “I would not feel safe doing that in Bryan.” Other students elect to remain on campus be yond their freshmen year. Texas A&M Univer sity has an on-campus housing capacity of 10,490. The residence halls can house 8,096, Corps of Cadets housing has a capacity of 2,184 and Cain Hall can hold 210 students. The Princeton Re view’s Complete Book of Colleges reports 32 percent of Texas A&M students live on-campus, whereas Texas Tech Universi ty only houses 23 percent of its students on-campus and the University of Texas houses 15 percent. “The greatest asset is the close proximity and the ease of becoming involved in campus activities,” said Sue Foster, See Housing on Page 2. RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion • Ags host Iowa State Women's bas ketball will try to win its third home game. "jit ,( | A; j ' > „ ! • Taking note of online services Students turn to Websites for assistance. Page 3 • Cutting down on pol lution and oliticians Page 1 3 • Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for details on filing court fees online. Check out The Battalion online at battalion.tamu.edu