ly, February 16, S ’it from -'hristi. link, ill takeonPail hey finish up^ play A&M-O i. to wrapop MONDAY February 19, 2001 Volume 107 ~ Issue 97 12 pages talion News Radio: 1:57 itheim eveille VII takes a bow l get rpy truck. 4 ^ ii I k T iliJ ^ I ^ r W i t'i www.thebatt.com Reveille VII, along with mascot corporal Bo ..JA/ilson, a sophomore business administra tion major, made her Texas A&M debut at CHADS ADAMS/The Battalion Saturday's men's basketball game against Missouri. She will replace Reveille VI at the end of the semester. ating Disorders Week ims to teach students I5( oo TS ^Jrandie Liffick Battalion an effort to address an ill- els that affects 5 million peo- 1^ each year, Student Health err ices Health Education, Stu- ent Counseling Service and iggie Representatives Educat- vg, About CoWege Hea\tb ACH) are coordinating Eat- ig Disorders Week. Peginning today, the week all teach Texas A&M students bout types of eating disorders, pnptoms, how to help a friend tid where to go for help. Infor- lation tables will be set up in the emorial Student Center from .m. to 2 p.m. today through tursday. JThe worst thing you can do Bomeone you think has an eat- ig disorder is to label them,” |id Dr. Mary Ann Covey, a psy- tiologist with Student Counsel- ig Service. “That just makes a erson defensive.” jCovey said there are certain /lys to helpfriends who are suf- elng from eating disorders. j‘People tend not to be real ensitive to eating disorders,” she They often will look at someone with anorexia and say* ‘Just eat,’ but it’s not that simple. This is a mental illness. “Just like you can’t expect a person with a fear of heights to go to the top of Rudder Tower and look down, you can’t expect a person with an eating disorder to all of the sudden eat more or stop binging,” Covey said. A discussion panel will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in 301 Rudder. Speakers include Covey; Dr. Ann Reed, associate director and head of clinical services at A.R Beutel Health Center; regis tered dietitian Amy Chapman and Michelle Corove from the psychology clinic. According to the National Eating Disorders Screening Pro gram (NEDSP), an eating disor der is an illness associated with disturbances in eating behavior, severe body image distortion and an obsession with weight. Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. in 281 Student Recreation Center, representatives from Student Health Services will lecture about prevention, treatment and risk factors of eating disorders. Although anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are the two most widely recognized types of eating disorders, the lecture will also discuss binge-eating disor der and how to recognize early signs of eating disorders. “New studies are now show ing that [eating disorders] are starting at younger ages than in the past,” Covey said. “But often, patients do not seek treatment un til they become of college age.” College, Covey said, provides an opportunity for people to face this illness and get help. Both physical and mental evaluations are necessary to di agnose an eating disorder, Reed said. “Often a person will come in with symptoms, such as depres sion or fatigue, but they don’t re alize that these are related to an eating disorder,” Reed said. “Both a physical and a mental evaluation are important to form a plan for treatment.” The Student Counseling Cen ter provides one-on-one therapy and group sessions for those suf fering from eating disorders. Ac cording to NEDSP, as many as one in every 10 college-age women suffer from clinical eat ing disorders. Lack of funding causes unfilled staff positions Physical Plant unable to provide same service level By Courtney Stelzel The Battalion The Texas A&M Physical Plant has lacked the money to hire enough people since last year. An estimated 200-250 slots for local and state posi tions are vacant due to the lack of money. Vacant positions remain in such'areas as the custodial de partment, landscaping and fa cility maintenance. Richard Williams, inter im assistant vice president for the Physical Plant, said, “We don’t provide the level of service that we have in the past. “The impacts (of this shortage) may not be known for years to come,” he said. The inadequate number of employees is due to a shortage in the budget and an inability to stay competi tive in the local job market. The Physical Plant is not able to offer the same amount of money as other businesses in the Bryan- College Station area. How ever, Williams said no em ployees have been fired due to the lack of money. “Slots just haven’t been refilled after employees have left,” Williams said. Williams said he initiated the hiring freeze, but that the decision is subject to the University’s chain of com mand, and is not entirely up to him. He said employees should rest assured that their jobs are not in danger. “[Termination of employ ees] will never happen as long as I’m interim,” Williams said. The Physical Plant has a budget of $14 million for salaries of state employees under the education and gen eral (ENG) budget, and an es timated $7 million for local, non-ENG employees. Physi cal Plant has an estimated 1,200 employees. ENG workers hold posi tions in state-regulated areas, such as custodial services for classrooms and libraries. Non- ENG employees provide such services as cleaning the sports facilities. Both ENG and non- ENG employees are entitled to the same benefits as regular state employees. Williams said he attribut es the insufficient budget to a habit of overspending. “We are within budget this year, so we are attempting to get people back on board at this time,” Williams said. INVESTIGATI College living arrangements Many students choose off-campus housing as dormitory rates continue to rise, communities compete for business By Sommer Bunce The Battalion With the various housing options available to Texas A&M students, in coming freshmen and their parents are a commodity in the residence hall mar ket, said Mack Thomas, assistant di rector of housing assignments for Texas A&M. Dorm-style apartment communi ties, such as the Callaway House and The Tradition at Northgate, pose a threat to the occupancy rates of campus residence halls, Thomas said. But, he said, the threat is small because of the large numbers of students campus halls can house. As more housing options become available off campus, the num ber of freshmen living on cam pus, currently 4,500, may be af fected, Thomas said. Callaway House, with an occupancy of 500, and Tradition, which could house as many as 795 students when construction ends this summer, could decrease the oc cupancy rates on campus by 9 percent, he said. “We are in competition, but most apartment-style resi dences are in competition for upperclassmen, and we deal mainly with freshmen,” Thomas said. “For the most part, freshmen live on campus and are strongly encouraged to do so by their parents.” Of the average 6,500 freshman ad mitted each year, 5,200 live in resi dence halls. Residence Life has overas signed its housing for five of the past 10 years. The Housing Office uses the rent from on-campus halls to help pay for utility costs and mortgage-like bills, such as the $6.25 million debt it owes for the construction of the modular halls, Thomas said. The main area where the Housing office invests money in the res idence halls is replacement, not addition, he said, as the housing office builds new halls and retires old ones. The average cost of building a res idence hall is about $50,000 per bed. A large modular-style hall such as Ap- pelt would have cost $ 14.9 million to construct. . Jennifer Cowley, assistant research scientist at A&M’s Real Estate Cen ter, said on-campus housing does not represent the true costs of real estate. On-campus residents are paying a bargain price for what they get, Cow ley said. “In most cases, you’re paying the cost of service and some profit to off- campus communities that have just been built,” she said. “The prices you find off-campus for the same types of things may be just a bit higher, but they represent the real costs of business. It’s simply up to the student and parents whether a'higher price is ex cessive or acceptable.” Occupancy rates were as high as 104 percent in 1995, a result of the “guessing game.” Thomas said Residence Life plays when calculating how many students to accept and how many upperclassmen will remain in halls. Last year, occu pancy decreased to 96 percent. Thomas said every student who applies for on-campus housing this fall will be offered See Living on Page 2. ills •eeasaaey Mresmaas Bata 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Average RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion News in Brief wo police officers injured in hit-and-run car accident ‘I Early Sunday morning, two College Station police officers were involved in an auto accident that left one [fficer seriously injured. Just after 3 a.m., officers Kar- Wiesepape and Bobby Branch were driving in an un- arked police car on Wellborn Road south of 2818 hen their vehicle was struck from behind. Both officers were taken to the College Station [ledical Center. Branch was treated and released, but iesepape remains hospitalized with injuries to her leg, hip and shoulder. ■ Officer Walter Sayers of CSPD said the suspect’s Vehicle was found Sunday near the Southgate Village Apartments. Sayers says a warrant wHI be issued for the suspect later today. The suspect could face felony it-and-run charges. Attack on Iraq may complicate U.N. negotiations UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The latest allied airstrikes near Baghdad are likely to com plicate upcoming U.N.-Iraq talks aimed at breaking a stale mate over U.N. sanctions and getting weapons inspectors back into the country. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is to meet with Iraqi For eign Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf on Feb. 26-27 for talks that had been seen as a chance to start a dialogue on the intertwined issues of sanctions and weapons inspections. In a letter to Annan and the Security Council, al-Sahhaf said the U.N. chief should “condemn the dangerous aggression and the increase of tension” and should take “speedy steps to pre vent such attacks from taking place again,” the official Iraqi News Agency said Sunday. Iraq wants the U.N. to lift crippling economic sanctions imposed after it invaded Kuwait in 1990. The United Nations says Iraq must first let inspectors back in to make sure President Saddam Hussein is not developing weapons of mass destruction. Though a major break through had not been expected from the meeting, the fact that Baghdad requested it and sent such a high-level delegation was seen as positive. Iraq’s supporters on the Se curity Council — Russia, China and France — had been hoping the United States and Britain would help their efforts to nudge Iraq into cooperation with weapons inspections. Instead, U.S. and British war planes launched their most seri ous attack on Iraq in two years, hitting air defense and radar sites south of Baghdad Friday night. The Pentagon said the attack was meant to thwart Iraq’s im proving capability to target U.S. and British planes that patrol a no-fly zone set up over southern Iraq after the Persian Gulf War. But the raid drew widespread condemnation, some of it from key U.S. allies in the Middle East and Europe who said it was time for Washington to recon sider its policies toward Iraq. Russia, France and China all said the airstrikes were unpro voked and would damage inter national efforts to resolve the sanctions issue. All three coun tries want the sanctions lifted. China called on the United States and Britain on Saturday to stop military action in Iraq im mediately to create a favorable atmosphere for the upcoming talks, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhu Bangzao. U.N. spokesman Fred Eck- hard said Annan hopes the meet ings will go ahead as scheduled “because all the major issues re main unresolved and unless we talk out these differences we don’t think they can be re solved.”