dies 9- was ki 3 final lapoi day. s ttalion News Radio: 1:57 p.m. KAIVIU 90.9 (OBI :^W:\ * t ftiiCI k’i ^ rMUV Volume 107 ~ Issue 98 Section A- 8 pages Section B - 6 pages www.thebatt.com onorrng leterans |o be built ■Elizabeth Raines Th> Battalion JBAII veterans in the Brazos Valley + 'iivht»fought during 20th century Amer ican wars will be honored with a mlmorial to be built in College Station. m ' The idea for the project began gabput three or four years ago amongst the veterans of Brazos Valley when we rellized that there was a void here in tzos County for honoring all the vet- | ■ns,” said Dr. Craig Carter, president Df t le Memorial for all Veterans of Bra- BCounty. ■The.memorial will have a central sculpture with walkways leading to different pavilions containing infor- liHtion about each of the wars in which ilH United States fought. The 11-acre Veterans Park and Athletic Complex f Hi be located one mile east of High- i?“Hy b, between Harvey Road and-Uni- ver ;ity Drive. H“We are not going to have soldiers tiolding guns or army tanks in our sculp- f H,” said committee chairman P. David % Hnei- “It is not going to be violent. Ul- fHately, giving one’s life for one’s Hinti^ involves violence, but the end , Hilt is ensured peace for the rest of us.” ■Three artists, Robert J. Eccleston of Schuyler Falls. N.Y.; Lawrence Noble }f Crestline, Calif.; and Robert Shure if Woburn, Mass., are competing to Hign the sculpture. Each artist will ■sent a model of his sculpture in late S|ril to the Brazos Valley Veterans Hmorial design committee. The com mittee will display the models at Post Oak Mall to receive public comments. The chosen artist and sculpture will be mnounced on May 28. ■The memorial board estimates the nemorial will cost between $150,000 md $250,000 and that the entire park met athletic complex will cost 5350,000 more. The city of College Htion, the city of Bryan and the Bra- H County Commissioners Court have uj-fpalh donated $50,000 to the memori- il. The veterans hope to get the rest of H money through fund raising. H“We want to make everyone under- Hid that this project belongs to every- one in Brazos Valley,” said committee Hirwoman Lynn Stuart. “We want to Hke sure everyone has input and we w|uld like for everybody to help make this project successful.” ■Once the design is chosen, the Hmorial board will complete a request H proposals from construction firms. He design committee will consider all Hposals and make a recommendation See Memorial on Page 2A. Bus referendum voting begins Bus Ops’ $12,000 campaign used to garner student support on fee By Brady Creel The Battalion The Bus Operations division of Parking, Traffic and Trans portation Services (PTTS) has spent approximately $12,000 of student fees since January on the campaign initiative for the Transportation Fee Referendum. Students will determine the fee’s fate by voting today and Wednesday. Gary Jackson, manager of Bus Operations, said final numbers tire not available yet, but he esti mates expenditures of $12,000. He said it was a bargain, consid ering the in-house labor and tech nology used for the campaign. Jackson and two other employees designed most of the marketing strategy, he said. Jackson said between $ 10,000 and $'l 2,000 was budgeted for the campaign and promotion. “If we could operate the way we are operating now, then we wouldn’t have put such a big push on this,” Jackson said. “I feel like this is an important mea sure to pass for the future of the u If I didn't (think the advertising is justified), we wouldn't be doing all this.” — Gary Jackson manager of Bus Operations University and Bus Operations.” Bus Operations has advertised on Bryan-College Station radio stations, in The Battalion, on sandwich boards on campus and with banners in the Memorial Student Center. In addition, Bus Operations gave away pro-refer endum T-shirts to students and used its employees to distribute fliers and positive information about the fee. Last week, Bus Operations gave away pizza and T-shirts to students at Rudder Fountain. Jackson said the bus drivers are tuning the bus radios to stations Bus Operations is advertising on. All of Bus Operations’ operat ing income comes from student fees, and Jackson said he thinks the importance of the referendum justified spending students’ mon ey to solicit their votes. “If I didn’t (think the advertis ing is justified), we wouldn’t be doing all this,” Jackson said. Tom Williams, director of PTTS, said advertising by Bus Operations is not unusual. If Bus Operations had not been promot ing the fee, it would have been advertising bus-pass sales, Williams said. Advertising is not a budgeted expense for Bus Operations, but See Advertising on Page 2A. Aggies to determine Bus Operations'fate by voting on proposal r 3 Sf/ •j- 8 --; STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion Bus Operations spent approximately $12,000 on its campaign to gather student support for the transportation fee. The proposed fee would add $50 a semester for the spring and fall and $25 for each summer session, to each student's bill. It would eliminate the cost of a bus pass. RUBEN DELUNA/Tiie Battalion By Brady Creel The Battalion The students of Texas A&M will deter mine the future of campus transportation to day and tomorrow as they vote on the Trans portation Fee Referendum. The outcome of the election could ultimately determine the fate of Bus Operations. The Transportation Fee Referendum, if passed by the student body and approved by the Board of Regents, would mandate a $50- per-semester fee that would be charged to all students. During fhe summer, the fee would be $25 per session. The fee would eliminate the need to purchase ? bus pass because all students would be able to ride on- and off- campus buses. “The end of [Bus Operations] being Ag gie owned is in sight” if the referendum does not pass, said Tom Williams, director of Parking, Traffic and Transportation Services (PTTS). “If Aggies want complete control (over routes and service), we have the op portunity to continue that.” Gary Jackson, manager of Bus Operations, said the fee would permit Bus Operations to upgrade its aging fleet of buses in a phase-out plan over the next 10 years. But, more impor tantly, Jackson said, the fee would be used to prevent Bus Operations from drowning in in creasing maintenance and operations costs, which have risen steadily in the past 10 years. Jackson said the students are not at a cross roads with this vote, because Bus Operations has the resources to operate on a limited level with its current amount of funding. But, he said, the end of Bus Operations as students know it is within sight if the referendum is not passed. “The bottom line is, we need new buses,” Jackson said. Jackson said that, in the past 10 years. Bus Operations has seen a steady decline in bus- pass sales, but PTTS has seen an increase in parking-pass sales. The relationship is almost one-for-one, Jackson said. “The demand for parking has been, in at least the last five years, greater than it has been for more transportation,” Jackson said. “So, the Uni versity and the administration have tried to meet that demand by building more parking lots.” That practice cannot continue, Williams said. “[Students] have to realize that a bus sys tem is the key to our future,” Williams said. “We can’t keep building parking spaces.” Jackson said, if students want to improve the current level of service, the referendum must be passed. “Service is about as good as we can get it and pay for it at the same time,” Jackson said. “We can’t increase frequency or add any more routes -— we just don’t have the funds to do it.” If the referendum does not pass. Bus Oper ations will be forced to decrease service so it can meet its budget, he said. “You will see the bus system erode until people wouldn’t want to ride it,” he said. Jackson said services have had to be cur tailed at times during the past four years to con tinue operating within budget. Williams said the Transportation Fee is the See Voting on Page2A. fling. to *4/ Same-sex weddings held at MSC Students get married in symbolic ceremony to draw attention to cause ■Jason Cato, a senior philosophy major, puts a ring on Marcus Wilkerson, a sopho more general studies major, during a same-sex mock marriage in front of Rudder .Fountain Monday. The wedding was sponsored by Queer Aggies and NOW. By Brandie Liffick The Battalion To the sounds of Pachelbel’s Canon and the “Wedding March”, one female couple and one male couple were symbolically married to protest the legal prohibition of same-sex marriages. The ceremonies, held Monday at Rudder Fountain, were spon sored by Queer Aggies and the Texas A&M chapter of the Na tional Organization for Women (NOW). Both groups were on hand to distribute information, an swer questions and present a peti tion opposing a bill filed in the Texas Legislature that would pre vent the state from legally recog nizing same-sex unions per formed in other states. Currently, It is my sincere hope that eventual ly the state will rec ognize civil mar riages between same-sex partners. ” — Rev. Jason Bennett Universal Light Church minister Vermont allows homosexual cou ples to enter into civil unions. According to the petition, the Texas bill is “discriminatory and vi olates the full faith and credit cause of the United States Constitution.” The bill proposes that the state of Texas not recognize same-sex mar riages nor the “benefits and respon sibilities as are granted to the spous es of a marriage.” “I think it’s really important get ting the word out about the govern ment and its own hypocrisy,” said Terrell Rabb, a junior political sci ence major. “This is symbolic of how things could be if the government does what is constitutionally right.” The Rev. Jason Bennett, an or dained minister in the Universal Light Church, presided over the ceremony. “It is my sincere hope that even tually the state will recognize civil marriages between same-sex part ners,” Bennett said. “It is in my opinion that the state has no need to bar them from the right to marry and all the privileges that it entails.” According to Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), not being able to legal ly marry means that same-sex couples do not have the right to spousal immigration benefits, le gal status with their partner’s chil dren or the right to make medical decisions for their partner. “We are trying to create aware ness of the rights that are denied to gay and lesbian couples because See Wedding on Page 2A. Residence halls join forces to increase alcohol awareness ■y David Johnson The Battalion ■ Texas A&M residence halls are laming up Wednesday and Thurs day to host “Party House,” an inter- tttive program that addresses deci sion-making in alcohol-related ftuations. Groups of 10 to 15 people vill be led through seven rooms in ■pence-Briggs and Walton halls that will deal with alcohol-related issues. ^ Anyone from A&M and the Bryan- College Station area is welcome to attend, said Walton Hall Director, Tony Andenoro. The program will begin Wednes day at 7 p.m. in Spence-Briggs Hall with a stereotypical college party scene, complete with a live DJ, block lights and root-beer kegs. Inside Spence-Briggs Hall groups will be lead by a student facilitator on a 30-40 minute tour through seven rooms. The goal of the program is to “provide a realistic perspective on college and alcohol and how those play together, positively and nega tively, and to help the participants make their own decisions after the evening,” said Tricia Schwery, Spence-Briggs hall director. The first four rooms will portray alcohol-related scenarios that stu dents might encounter in real life. Some of the rooms will show the harmful effects of alcohol and situa tions in which a lack of awareness can have dangerous consequences, and other rooms will show situations in which alcohol is responsibly con sumed, Schwery said. The scenarios are interactive and performed to en courage positive, more educated de cision-making, Andenoro said. University Police Department (UPD) officers and Alcohol and Drug Education Program (ADEP) officials will facilitate two rooms. They will perform a mock arrest and discuss the legal consequences associated with minor in possession charges (MIP), driving while intoxicated (DWI) charges and driving under the influ ence (DUI) charges. Schwery said the latter portion of the program was added because many residents are un aware of the laws and consequences surrounding these violations. Beer goggles, glasses designed to simulate intoxication, will be worn by participants while UPD officers give sobriety tests, Schwery said. Schwery said the last room is a| memorial to alcohol-related deaths. Pictures of deceased students from A&M and around the country will be on display, and poems dedicated to accident victims will be read. Stories; from family members of the de ceased will be read to show that this See Alcohol on Page 2A.