ONDAYOCTOBER 15, 2001 Texas A&M University 1 SECTION • 10 PAGES Celebrating 125 Years NEWS IN BRIEF 3 hysical Plant ire knocks out jir conditioning An electrical malfunction parked a fire at the Texas iM Physical Plant shortly ter8 p.m. Friday night. A chiller housed in one of he complex's buildings lught fire. The blaze was utinguished within 20 min- tes and the building was leclared safe at 9:30 p.m., aid Dick Williams, vice pres- dent of the Physical Plant iepartment. No one was in the building ihen the fire started, iiams said. A Physical >lant team cut power to all he chillers to end the blaze. Buildings on campus may lave experienced some dis comfort Friday night because of iir conditioner problems relat- dto the blaze, Williams said. Student Senate on campus for Constituency Day Texas A&M student sena- irs will be on campus Monday for constituency ia^from 10 a.m.to 3 p.m. listen to students’ com ments, concerns and sug gestions. Senators will be available for students at several loca- on campus, including the Commons, Sbisa Dining , the Memorial Student Center, Wehner and the Richardson Building. PUBLIC EYE Unemployment claims in Texas Jan. 2001 69,777 May 2001 87,029 For patriots’ pride Centuries old, the American flag still flies as a symbol of freedom and qlor\ luffs slide Ags, 31-21 •A&M suffers familiar loss to Colorado Page 9 The eyes of ESPN are upon you • Pro-Con: Is [ Sidelines’ a damaging misrepresentation WEATHER TODAY HIGH LL o ■'T 00 Miyj LOW 55° F TOMORROW 1 fVA . 7 HIGH 69° F m ■ ^ m r 4- LOW Fw 50° F FORECASTS COURTESY OF www.weathermanted.com SERVING THE TEXAS A&M COMMUNITY SINCE 1893 Volume 108 • Issue 36 College Station, Texas www.thebatt.com Two Aggies die in car crash Third student suffers minor injuries, remains hospitalized in stable condition By Sommer Bunge THE BATTALION Two Texas A&M students were killed and one was in stable condition after a one-car collision outside Giddings early Sunday morning. A 1996 Toyota was traveling north bound on US Highway 77 in Lee County when the car struck a tree at 7:34 a.m. Passengers Antonio Torres II, 18, a Bonfire loses safety firm freshman business administration major from Mission, and Xavier Monge Ortega, 20, a freshman agricultural economics major from Guayaquil, Ecuador, were killed in the accident. The driver, Jonathan Steed, 19, a sophomore political science major from Amarillo, was transported to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin. He was listed in stable condition with minor injuries. All three students were Delta Tau Delta pledges. A Delta Tau Delta member confirmed Sunday night that the pledges were togeth er for a fraternity-related activity. A “Pledge Retreat” was listed for Saturday, Oct. 13, on the Delta Tau Delta calendar posted on their Website. No information was given on what the retreat entails, and it was not clear if all three pledges participat ed in the event. Members discussed what they could say publicly about the accident during their chapter meeting Sunday. “It [the accident] has nothing to do with hazing,” said the Delta member, who requested anonymity. “As a fraternity, I can say that we don’t haze.” Delta Tau Delta president Joe Handy, also the public relations representative for the InterFratemity Council (IFC), declined to comment. Monge Ortego told friends he was spending the night with a fraternity brother See Accident on page 2. By Sommer Bunce THE BATTALION The safety firm that was to help design Bonfire 2002 backed out of contract negotiations with Bonfire planners this month, citing a lack of involvement with students as its main reason for leaving. Jay Marak, of Marak Safety Services in Houston, said he informed University officials and Joe Colaco of CBM Engineers, the firm chosen to design Bonfire 2002, of his decision to withdraw from negotiations by email Oct.l. Marak’s main complaint was that he would not be able to meet with students until the design was finalized in mid- December and students were back on campus in January. “I felt like I needed access to students beginning in October, and they said I could not have access until January” Marak said. “We wanted to start talking with team leaders, but their design is not cho sen, and they [planners] said no student is going to come to a meet ing with us if there is not a design.” Despite the setbacks, David Godbey, assistant director of the Physical Plant Department for engineering and design services and A&M’s point man in the design phase of planning for Bonfire, said it is “still a strong possibility” that there will be a Bonfire in 2002. Marak said that losing three months of student contact would leave him pressed for time in the safety aspects of Bonfire that his firm would have been responsi ble for. “1 take great consideration that nothing goes wrong [with Bonfire]” Marak said. “When it 1 pledge allegiance A third grade class at Rock Prairie Elementary School recites the pledge of allegiance in front of the American flag in their classroom Friday. Rod Paige, U.S. secretary of education, asked more than STUART VILLANUEVA • THE BATTALION 100,000 public and private elementary and secondary schools to participate in Pledge Across America, a nationwide synchronized recital Friday at 1 p.m. ASB may lose University recognition Organization not allowed to choose its own adviser By Maureen Kane THE BATTALION See Bonfire on page 2 Alternative Spring Break (ASB), a student service organi zation, may lose its University recognition if it refuses to accept a new adviser chosen by the Department of Student Activities, ASB leaders said. Beth Guyton, chair of ASB and a senior biomedical engineer ing major, said the organization has until Wednesday to accept Angela Gray, the student activi ties adviser designee, as its new adviser to complete the re-recog nition process on time. In a meet ing with Monica Latham, assis tant director of student activities, Guyton said she was told that ASB must replace their current adviser, Emil Luza, with Gray. “On Oct. 1, I was told that they (student activities) were going to replace our adviser,” Guyton said. “Emil (Luza) was out and we will not be recog nized with Emil as either pri mary or secondary adviser. They felt that a candidate from their department would be better suit ed to the task of advising ASB and [Gray] would be the only acceptable adviser for ASB.” Emil Luza is currently the adviser for ASB. All student organizations must undergo a re-recognition process in which student activi ties evaluates the operation and activities of an organization, as well as the qualifications and training of its advisers. Official documentation for re-recognition was due by Oct. 1, but ASB was given a two- week grace period. Kevin Jackson, director of Student Activities, said Gray is the best choice for the position of adviser for ASB, and is the “most effective fit” with the goals and purpose of the organization. “It’s the responsibility of the Department of Student Activities to assure the best fit between an adviser and a stu dent organization,” Jackson said. “We look very closely at who the adviser is going to be to assure that that group is getting the best level of advising. As an affiliated group, they (ASB) See ASB on page 5. Taliban escorts journalists through bombed cities KARAM, Afghanistan (AP) — Waving shovels and sticks, enraged vil lagers surged toward foreign journalists brought there Sunday by Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban militia to see what offi cials say was the devastation of a U.S. air attack. “They are coming to kill us! They are coming for information, to tell the planes where to bomb!” angry and terrified vil lagers shouted as they charged the reporters. Taliban escorts held them back. Sunday’s trip to the village of Karam in Afghanistan's eastern mountains marked the first time since the U.S.-led air campaign began Oct. 7 that the Taliban have allowed international journalists into areas controlled by the Islamic militia. The Taliban, who escorted journalists to the village, claim nearly 200 people were killed here Thursday. If true, it would be the deadliest single strike by U.S. and British warplanes. “They are innocent people living here,” one villager, Gul Mohammed, said. “There is no military base. What is it they are looking for in Afghanistan? Where is Osama bin Laden? He is not here. Why did they bomb us?” The small village had clearly been hit by explosions. A number of houses were damaged or reduced to rubble, and sever al bomb craters were dug into the rocky landscape. Dozens of sheep and goat car casses were strewn about, the air thick with a rancid stench. But it was difficult to assess claims of casualty figures three days after the attack. Muslims traditionally bury their dead quickly. Villagers pointed out what they called traces of the attack’s deadli ness, including a bloodstained pillowcase by a house and what appeared to be a rot ting human limb. Washington has expressed regret for any civilian victims in its airstrikes, say ing it doesn’t target noncombattants. It has acknowledged a stray bomb hit homes outside Kabul last week but has said it can not verify the alleged Karam attack. In the hospital in Jalalabad, 25 miles to the east, doctors treated what they said were 23 victims of bombing at Karam — one, a child barely two months old, swathed in bloody bandages. Another child, Samina, played with See Attacks on page 2. Number of anthrax cases rises to twelve NEW YORK (AP) — A police offi cer and two lab technicians involved in the NBC anthrax investigation have test ed positive for the bacteria. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Sunday. Nevada officials said four people who may have come into contact with a contaminated letter at a Microsoft office tested nega tive, while results were not known for two others. In Washington, meanwhile. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said he considered the anthrax cases in New York, Nevada and Florida to be instances of bioterrorism. “It certainly is an act of terrorism to send anthrax through the mail,” he said on Fox News Sunday. And Attorney General John Ashcroft said it was premature “to decide whether there is a direct link” to Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network, but “we should consider this potential that it is linked.” See Anthrax on page 5-