• Listen to KAMI) 90.9 FM at 1:57 p.m. jfor details about student participation in the Great Pizza Taste-Off • Check out The Battalion online at I battalion.tamu.edu. Aggjeland Campus Guide • Special Section Maps and information about the campus and community Section B Weather: Partly cloudy with a high of 100 and a low of 74. THE MONDAY August 28, 2000 Volume 107 ~ Issue 2 24 pages ~ Section B 8 pages F VlMki =r:1 * i i't 1'k'l i'i =kkil *4 ockwood awaits trial ate for Kujawa murder aril 16 Kuiawas3car,found[it] Easterwood l AirportV M * MS© RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion By Brian Ruff The Battalion The date for the murder trial of Texas A&M student Kerry Kujawa is still pending after the July 5 indictment of Kenny Wayne Lockwood of San Antonio. The trial is scheduled to take place at the Hays Coun ty Courthouse in San Marcos because the murder was com mitted in Hays County. If convicted, Lockwood would face five to 99 years in prison. The judge presiding over the case will decide when the trial will be held, said Officer Ortiz with the Hays County Sheriff’s Department. Kujawa, a junior mechan ical engineering major, was killed between April 7 and April 10, after he left College Station to meet a female ac quaintance called “Kelley.” Ku jawa had met Kelley over the In ternet, and the two had been ex changing emails for several months. Kujawa was reported missing when friends of the 20-year-old be came concerned with his absence. Kujawa’s car was discovered in the long-term parking lot at Easterwood Airport on April 10, the day Kujawa was expected to return to College Station. Lockwood, 31, was charged with the murder of the 1998 Fort Bend Austin High School graduate after confessing to posing as Kel ley, a female pre-law student, and killing Kujawa. Authorities said that tracing the emails from Lock- wood was the key to his arrest. “My husband and 1 just want the trials to end quickly and for swift justice to be served,” said Lucille Kujawa, Kerry Kujawa’s mother, ' in a May 29 Battalion article. Get your motors runnin’ 4H| STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion J.B. Newcomb, a College Station police officer, takes on biker janice Angst in an exhibition slow race at the Hotter Than Hell motorcyle show this weekend on University Drive. The goal of the slow race is to come in last by riding as slow as possible without falling over. onfire committees research past, future Parking permits delayed 3 weeks f Maureen Kane & Marium Mohiuddin be Battalion I On June 16, 2000, Texas A&M Presi- pent Dr. Ray M. Bowen changed A&M’s 0-year-old tradition when he stated that Bonfire would be put on hiatus until at least 2002 and significant changes would je made to the building process, including heater University supervision and a pro- jessionally engineered design. “Bowen received thousands of emails Ind letters with opinions about what should lappen to Bonfire,” said Dr. J. Malon foutherland, vice president of Student Af- pirs. “We tried to respond to most of them.” Since then, three committees have been bmied—one to honor those killed and in jured in the 1999 Aggie Bonfire collapse, one to plan an event for this year and one to suggest a permanent Bonfire staicture. “Bowen received thousands of emails and letters with opinions about what should happen to Bonfire.” — Dr. j. Malon Southerland vice president of Student Affairs Prior to the release of Bowen’s deci sion, a group of students circled a petition supporting the continuation of Bonfire and gathered 10,000 to 12,000 signatures. During the summer, Southerland said some members of the group met with him to discuss their efforts to create an off- campus bonfire. Southerland said he told the group that any off-campus bonfire would not be supported by the Universi ty, and students participating may face punishment if they proceed with plans for the off-campus bonfire. The Bonfire planning committee, a committee of the Faculty Senate, stressed the need for reform of Bonfire at an open forum of last spring. “It was the opinion of the planning committee that Bonfire should not occur in 2000 and should not occur in its pre sent form in the future,” said Jonathan Smith, chair of the committee, in a May 20 Battalion article. ^ Thousands of people attend Bonfire each year; however, this year, in place of Bonfire, there will be a yell practice and a memorial for the 12 Aggies who died and the 27 who were injured in the collapse. The first of the three committees is a memorial committee headed by Rusty Thompson, assistant director for the Memorial Student Center, and Forrest Lane, student body president and a senior political science major. This committee is See Bonfire on Page 2. umber company relocates logs KTFB proposes bonfire model Sophomore biomedical science major Angela Krause agreed. “Having the logs on campus for so long was a difficult reminder. Removing [the logs] will be a good way to continue heal ing and move on,” she said. Lawson would not comment on how she thinks the students would react to the empty Bonfire site. Charles A. Sippial, vice president for administration, said the appropriate time ar rived for the logs’ removal. “We have had our grieving period and will certainly never forget the 12 who died,” Sippial said. “It was hard for every one to see the logs being moved, but, hope fully, this will help many move on.” jr Anna Bishop he Battalion On Aug. 11, Texas A&M approved the re- oval of the 1999 Aggie Bonfire logs to an dA&M waste water treatment plant.The igs had remained unmoved, except for in stigation purposes, since the collapse in ovember. Twelve of the logs have also been eserved for future memorials. According to Cynthia Lawson, execu- e director of University Relations, the |gs were moved by C&C Logging, the me company based in Jasper, Texas that Jded the University in dismantling the fall en logs after the collapse. I Relocating the more than 2 million unds of wood, which would regular- cost between $15,000 and $20,000, s done free of charge by C&C. “Everyone knew the logs must be ved eventually,” said Kenieca ehn, a junior political science ma- “Emotionally, removing the logs m the site will be hard for every- e affected by the collapse, but it is mething that had to be done. The ;s couldn’t have realistically stayed |the site.” C&C Logging Co. President Bob- Cassidy said it took about 25 trips he treatment plant, which is locat- two miles from campus near East- jvood Airport, to transport the logs. Cassidy said the job was difficult tause the wood had become rched and decayed since November p easily broke when workers tried pove the logs. Sophomore general studies major [vid Goddard said he thinks the ab- ce'of the logs will help the healing cess for returning Aggies. “Having the logs in plain sight s a constant reminder of the Bon- Bradley atchison/the Battalion tragedy last November,” Goddard A logging tractor trailer from Jasper, “We don’t want to forget, but it Texas, moves a full load of logs away me to move on.” from the Bonfire site Aug. 11. By Mariano Castillo & Summer Bunge The Battalion Keep the Fire Burning (KTFB) pre sented a model of the organization’s pro posed off-campus bonfire to a small group of supporters at the Texas Hall of Fame on Saturday. Though members say they were threat ened by the University’s top administrators, a claim Dr. J. Malon Souther land, vice president for Student Affairs, rejects, the KTFB board members presented plans and a bonfire model they say will stand the tests of safe ty, maintenance and tradition. The bonfire model is the re sult of the group’s collabora tion with professional engi neers — one of them a Texas A&M fonner student who par ticipated in the cutting, stack ing and lighting of the Aggie Bonfire for three years during his college career — and de fines what the group considers adequate safety standards. KTFB was formed in May and plans for a student-run, student-created and student- maintained off-campus bon fire evolved within the organization after A&M’s announcement in early June that, pending proper research and restrictions, there would be no Bonfire until 2002. Guidance from professional engineers, risk management and alumni support form the foundation for a successful off-campus bonfire, according to Joe Dyson and Gary Crenshaw, KTFB board members. The proposed stack would have a sin gle, unspliced 60-foot centerpole sur rounded by logs that are not stacked but leaned against the central structure in three tiers and then wired. The imperfec tions of the logs would remain untrimmed — unlike the traditional smooth logs of previous Bonfires — allowing each log to dig into the ground and maintain the structure. These modifications, Dyson said, would eliminate wedging and mini mize hoop stress. According to the Spe cial Commission on the 1999 Aggie Bon fire report, wedging and hoop stress were two major factors that led to the collapse. STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion Trent Owens (bottom), Gary Crenshaw (left) and Joe Dyson (right), board members of Keep the-Fire Burning, held an organizational meeting at the Texas Hall of Fame Saturday. Steel cables would be used to maintain stability before and during burning. Once lighted, the structure would not collapse on itself like traditional Bonfires, Dyson said. “This is not going to fal[,” he said. “We’re going to have to put it out.” No student would climb the stack or stand on any part of the stack to bind or hoist logs. Instead, a pulley system would be utilized, leaving no students in the vicin ity of the log-stacking process. Such a system would allow students on one end to reposition the log on the other. See KTFB on Page 2. By Arati Bhattacharya The Battalion A three-week delay on parking permits and bus pass es has forced Parking, Traffic and Transportation Services (PTTS) to implement several alternatives for the beginning of Fall 2000 to accommodate students’ needs and maintain campus safety. Various causes accounted for the permit delay, including the creation of a new design and the renewal of a five-year contract bid. “Although the order was shipped out a little later than usual, a manufacturing delay has put us three weeks behind,” said Sherry Wine, executive as sociate director for PTTS. “If s one of those times where every one is just overextended.” Parking without permits will be allowed in blue and red parking lots until Sept. 11, when ticketing will begin. The backup has caused PTTS staff to spend several ex tra evening hours reorganizing 20,000 letters and permits from ZIP code to alphabetical order. The letters originally would have been mailed to students and detailed where students can park and other general campus-parking instructions. “We have the best group of people here who have been ex tremely cooperative with such a timely task,” Wine said. PTTS could not carry out the first mailing of commuter passes. “2,000 yellow professional student and staff permits have been delivered to correspond ing departments, followed by 5,000 garage passes and 3,700 red resident permits, which could be picked up at resi dence halls last week,” said Pam Horner, computer sys tems manager for PTTS. “We are doing everything possible to accommodate the students, while trying to function smoothly with move-in and a new year.” With a ceiling on red per mits this year, approximately 1,700 University residents were issued blue commuter parking permits; these were also sent to residence halls for pickup. Permits not picked up at residence halls will be sent to Reed Arena to be picked up this week. There is a waiting list for red permits, and Wine said she expects to see about 300 slots turned over. Postcards were sent out to students explaining that com muter parking permits and bus passes can be picked up from today until Friday at Reed Are na from 9:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Horner said the PTTS of fice will be open Saturday from 9 until noon to further fa cilitate students. Wine stressed the department’s emphasis on safety and effective manage ment, reminding students to park only in legal spaces. A&M buses can be ridden without passes until Sept. 11. Students must present a driver’s license or picture I.D., preferably something with a student I.D. number, at time of pickup. Permits and passes can still be ordered at the PTTS office in the Koldus building or through the Website at www- ptts.tamu.edu. “We are do ing every thing possible to accommo date the stu dents. ...” — Pam Horner computer systems manager for PTTS Parking lots around Kyle Field will change to red lots this fall to increase safety and reduce traffic. Several re minders will encourage stu dents to move their cars during home games — notices will be printed on the permits, key chains are being distributed, and students may receive email reminders.