The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 27, 2001, Image 11

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    I uesdav,
V.Febn,
cstlav. February 27, 2001
ts in Bri t
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NATION
Page 3B
THE BATTALION
News in Brief
os
to Houston,
I!" fc r e ry, boat collide,
dicing 1, injuring 2
ARCO ISLAND, Fla. (AP) —A
erry carrying 120 passengers
joollided early Monday in heavy
og with a smaller boat about 15
miles off Marco Island, killing one
oerson and injuring two others,
one seriously, authorities said.
' | he person killed and the two
injured were on the smaller boat,
said Jorge Aguilera, spokesman
for Collier County Emergency
Mldical Services. Their names
werfe not immediately available.
Ea rthquake rocks
San Francisco Bay
■SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — An
earthquake sent a jolt through
the San Francisco Bay area
Sunday afternoon but no dam
age was immediately reported.
■The quake had a 4.4 magni-
tule, the U.S. Geological Survey
reported. It was centered 11
mles east of San Jose.
■Earthquakes with a magni-
tule stronger than 4.0 can
cai se moderate damage.
irs
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The series e:;
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this weeker
road trip,
defeated tlie:
Gators, 5-2,:
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will take a
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Hoop dreams
Jonathan Monroe participates in a basketball
practice at the Lincoln Center Monday night.
STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion
The practices are led by Project Sunshine and
allow children with disabilities to interact.
E er-cap it a power consumption low
In California despite overall usage
■.OS ANGELES (AP) — California’s power
Tilis has led neighboring states to accuse the
jolden State of hogging electricity. But the num-
tell a different story.
B/alifomia does use a vast amount of electricity,
it consumes less on a per-capita basis than all
| rtfifcr states except Rhode Island.
■fhc mild climate and less heavy industry than
)thc -states are part of the reason. Experts say cred-
ta so must go to stringent conservation measures,
■■■it's true we’re big, and it's true we didn’t build
' kit of power plants.... But we're not energy hogs
g P JujU,” said Arthur Rosenfeld, who sits on the five-
^ ne iber California Energy Commission. “We're
7 p.lMhnost as good as Western. Europe, and Western
7 Europe is about twice as energy-efficient as the
' P'"jnited States.”
r-os
:30 p.i
■Among the 50 states, only Texas consumes more
mergy — measured by its total use of electricity,
Kalifor
alifornia: big, not wasteful
California has one of the lowest per capita consumptions of energy in
the United States, ranking No. 47.
bp 10 states
btal annual energy consumption
er capita, in millions of British
Jiermal units (Btu).
ational
verage: 351
laska 1,144
ouisiana 940
yoming 892
exas 588
orth Dakota 555
entucky 463
ndiana 458
labama 457
est Virginia 446
aine 445
alifornia 240
lote: Includes coal, natural gas,
letroleum and electricity.
Electricity usage
Annual per capita electricity
consumption for selected states, in
millions of Btu.
National
average: 40
Note: Figures are for 1997,
the most recent data
lOD US/ 1
call 764^
Bypass 6
<RCE: U.S. Energy Information Administration, 1997 State Energy Data Report.
natural gas and oil — than California, the nation’s
most populous state.
However, California ranks 47th in per-capita
energy use — well below No. 4 Texas, No. 20
Washington and No. 27 Oregon, according to the
Energy Information Administration, which is part
of the U.S. Energy Department.
When looking specifically at per-capita elec
tricity consumption, California ranks 49th, at 24.2
million BTUs, the agency said. Californians’ per-
capita electricity use is only 60 percent of the na
tional average.
For air conditioning alone, a typical Califor
nia household uses one-third the amount of elec
tricity consumed by a household in Texas or,
Florida, according to the U.S. Energy Depart
ment’s 1997 Residential Energy Consumption
Survey.
California has “a different climate, so even if
you do have warm summers, they’re
not humid, so you don’t have the big,
huge air conditioning load you see in
Florida or Texas,” said Robert Latta,
the survey’s manager at the Energy In
formation Administration.
California also uses electricity, as
well as natural gas, oil and coal, more
wisely than most states thanks to ag
gressive conservation efforts started
during the oil shocks of the early 1970s,
federal and state data indicate.
Key to those efforts are stringent
standards for new homes and commer
cial buildings that dictate such things as
the types of windows and lighting and
the amount of insulation.
“If it is not the leading state, they are
at least tied for it” in efficiency stan
dards, said Ed Wisniewski, deputy di
rector of the Boston-based Consortium
for Energy Efficiency. “Historically,
they have been very progressive, and
many of the programs we advocate nationally were
started in California.”
California’s per-capita use is lower because
many energy-intensive industries are located else
where. Aluminum smelting and paper manufac
turing, for example, are clustered in the Pacific
Northwest.
The industries that are located in California, are
generally more efficient in their use of electricity
than industries elsewhere, according to 1998 fig
ures from the California Energy Commission,
which shapes state energy policy.
Companies use just 0.2 kilowatt-hours of elec
tricity to produce every dollar’s worth of goods and
services in California,’while businesses in neigh
boring states use twice as much, according to com
mission figures.
“The concept that California is a big, wasteful
state really isn’t true,” said Latta, of the Energy In
formation Administration.
There is still room for improvement in Califor
nia, particularly when it comes to conservation.
California ranks just 17th among all states in
spending by utilities on energy-efficiency pro
grams as part of their revenue.
In 1998, California utilities reduced spending
on energy-efficiency programs, though the current
crisis has prompted the major utilities to reverse
that, according to the American Council for an En
ergy-Efficient Economy.
Gov. Gray Davis recently released a $404 mil
lion conservation program designed to control
growth in the state’s demand for electricity.
Maintaining energy efficiency and keeping de
mand in check as the population grows will be
among the toughest challenges in the years ahead.
Energy use per capita is up 10 percent over
the past two decades. Californians used about
7,000 kilowatt hours per year in 1980, compared
with about 7,700 kilowatt hours last year, ac
cording to scientists at Lawrence Berkeley Na
tional Laboratory.
ms
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Tuesday, February 27 ♦ 4:00 PM ♦ 502 Rudder
Want to go to
Israel for free?
Texas A&M has received 20 spots for the
spring round of HillePs Birthright Israel Trip.
All bed, boarding and transportation costs are
taken care of from the departure hub city (LA,
NYC, Chicago) until your return two weeks later.
We are tentatively scheduled to leave on June 7-14. Dates will be confirmed
as soon as they are available. Register for the trip on line at:
www.israeCZOOO.org/application.htm Registration closes March 6' h !l
Additional information on the itinerary and FAQ is at: wvvvv.israel2000.org
The tentative timetable for recruitment and registration is as follows:
Completion of jnterviews: Friday, March 16
Notification of participants: Monday, March 19
Last day for roster: Monday, March 26
All Forms/deposits at the DC Hillel Tuesday, March 27
All dates are subject to change.
Requirements: 1) Identify with the Jewish people
2) Never traveled to Israel in another Jewish affiliated college program
3) Get your own round-trip ticket to an assigned departure hub city
4) Age 18-26 years old
For more information contact TAMU Hillel Foundation at:
Hillel@startel.net
For more infonnation, please contact:
Department of Student Financial Aid
Scholarship Office
PO Box 30016
Room 220, The Pavilion
College Station TX 77842
19791845-3982
Accountants... looking for the right kind of company?
INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTED Then you should consider.
FOR FULL TIME ACCOUNTING
POSITIONS LOCATED IN
SUGAR LAND, TEXAS ON:
Date: Tuesday, March 6, 2001
Location: Kyle Field
Bring a completed application and unofficial
transcript to the interview
• Must be able to work in the U.S. for an
indefinite period of time.
UNOCAL^
Visit our web site: www.unocal.com
Texas A&M - Information Session
Date: March 5, 2001 Time: 7:00 - 8:00 PM
Location: 203 MSC Building
Refreshments: Pizza and Soft Drinks
Dress: Casual
Unocal is an Equal Opportunity Employer
Aggieland Printing sells
Graduation Announcements
• Order and pay online:
www.aggielandprinting.com
• Aggieland Printing can get you ready
to mail announcements in one week
• We have our own unique design
Licensed by A&M Don't miss it - see them
on the web
ON
We sell
• Graduation Announcements
• Thank You Notes
Graduation Remembran
Personalized Graduate Notepad
We accept orders until April 3(Mh!
Aggieland Printing
1801 Holleman, C.S.
693-8621 M-F 8:30-5:30
2/28 AT 2:28
Attention ALL Student Leaders...
It’s a 228 mile road trip from College Station to Dallas.
Last year, 228 people reported alien sightings in Texas alone.
It’s been projected that the Fightin’ Texas Aggies will score
228 touchdowns next season.
WHAT IS THE MYSTERY OF 228???
Come Find out on
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 (2/28)
at 2:28pm
in the Governance Room in Koldus,
formerly known as Room 144, but now
renamed, you guessed it, Room 228!!
Student leaders and local celebrities will be chatting about their
experiences in dealing with risky business.
Contact Regina Rosell for further information at
845-0692 or regina02@tamu.edu
^vRiskManapent
^ ht Texas A&M University
Department of Student Activities
Division of Student Affairs
Hey Current Students
NEED M0NEY...CET A JOB!!
• ••
NKD A KUOUMIIP...CET TO A
COMPUTR!!!
The Academic Excellence/Academic Incentive
Scholarship Applications are now available online!!
http://faid.tamu.edu/
AEAIintro.cfm
Deadline is March 1,2001 at 5:00 PM!