Repres Inforr Ja (71 T L3 Presents Uncovering D-Day : Project Neptune thursday - Oct 18th 7:30 p.m. -ZACH102 Entry-Level Clerical Positions (Full and Part-Time) SourceNet Solutions, a leading business process outsourcing company, is expanding its global operation and opening an office in College Station. SourceNet Solutions has immediate full and part-time openings for qualified, dependable employees for office work, including data entry, customer service and general administrative duties. Work schedules are flexible! Qualified candidates will possess basic PC skills and a high customer service orientation. Please send us your resume, along with salary history or salary requirements to: Email: recruiting@sourcenetsolutions.com Address: 1212 N. Post Oak Rd, Houston, IX 77055 Fax:713-548-5079 SourceNet SOLUTIONS Cooder Grow Saturday, October 20 th Washington County Fairgrounds Brenham Bin Pekar Jennifer Fitts Peter Dawson Miranda Lambert Advance Tickets $10 Online at ktex.com and at all Max Texaco Food Marts $15 at the Gate, Opening at 6 p.m. Proceeds benefit the American Red Cross And the Victims of September 11th KTeH^l06.t 72 COME AND GET IT! PICKING UP your 2001 Aggieland is easy. If you ordered a book, go to the basement of the Reed McDonald Building, and show your Student ID. If you did not order last year's Texas A&cM yearbook (the 2000-2001 school year), you may purchase one for $35 plus tax in 015 Reed McDonald. Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Cash, checks, VISA, MasterCard, Discover and American Express accepted. Page 2 Campus JL th! E BATTALION MSC E.L. Miller Academics Continued from Page 1 for its strict honor code — “Aggies do not lie, cheat or steal, nor do they tolerate those who do” — extensive research has shown that Aggies are academically dishonesty, Kibler said. Dr. Donald McCabe of Rutgers University, founding president of the Center of Academic Integrity and leading researcher on the topic for the past decade, has found that schools showing the highest incidents of cheating are large public universities. A 1998 survey conducted by Texas A&M and coordinated by Kibler reported very high incidents of Aggies engaging in academic dishonesty. “Texas A&M is a large public university, and the results we got when we did this survey three years ago were what you would expect,” Kibler said. “We have a lot of work to do here at Texas A&M to draw awareness to the problem and then do some things to try to address that problem.” Faculty and students are welcome to attend the conference, which will include a variety of work shops and sessions over a four-day period. Today, the conference will host a discussion on academic integrity and the Internet, addressing issues of plagiarism, challenges in distance educa tion and effects on the traditional classroom that result from the use of the Internet. The regular conference begins Friday evening. Several A&M faculty members are scheduled to either speak or participate in the conference ses- Forum Continued from Page 1 that, because we’ll make A&M less competitive,” Bowen said. “The value of your degree depends on our ability to keep our programs on the cutting edge.” A combination of new expenditures and limited funding from the state have contributed to the budget crunch, Bowen said. Faculty members will get a three per cent salary increase, and staff members will receive a four percent increase. Although the staff raise is state mandated, the state is shouldering only half the cost, Bowen said. Also, the rising price of ener gy has resulted in an $8 mil lion increase in the utilities budget. Texas A&M also fared poorly in the 2001 Texas leg islative session in comparison with other state schools, Bowen said. A&M received a 6 percent general revenue increase from the state, while other schools in the A&M System got a 9.5 percent increase, and the University of Houston received an 11.7 per cent boost. Because A&M (along with the University of Texas at Austin) have access to the Permanent University Fund, both schools are often excluded from competing for some state funds, Bowen said. . “The budget process is structured to the disadvantage of A&M and the University of Texas,” Bowen said. “There are no advocates for this kind of university, nobody to stand up and say that there should be some universities in Texas that are among the best in the nation.” Because it is likely the state will continue shifting the cost of higher education to students, another similar fee increase will be needed in four or five years, Bowen said. Some of the students at the forum were skeptical that the University had examined other options before raising fees. “It (excellence fee) may be necessary, but they should at least consider budget cuts,” said John Spurlin, a junior engineering technology major. Bowen said A&M was already operating at a high level of efficiency, and any cuts would severely degrade the quality of programs and services. “A&M’s per student spend ing is 40 percent below other public schools at our level, and the fact that we’re still compet ing at that level demonstrates that we’re pretty efficient,” Bowen said. If implemented, the excel lence fee is expected to gener ate $9 million for the 2002- 2003 fiscal year, and after four years, when most stu dents will be paying the fee, it will bring in $30 million annually. However, Bowen said, rising deficits produced by spending commitments such as staff and faculty raises will continue to devour all the fee revenue. Bowen will discuss the fee proposal at the Oct. 26 Board of Regents meeting, but no action will be taken. Bowen said he hopes regents will approve the fee before year’s end, so prospective students can take the added expense into account. TONIGHT AnewtoN all eASTGAie neswems 1 I I I I I I Come join your fellow neighbors for a block party Thursday, Oct 18 5:30-7 pm Thomas Park f'C'od' BEK A GOOD NEIGHBOR ENT E College Station ! Hend rix: Th e Classical Version ROBERT BLUESTONE, Guitar Friday, Oct 1 9 • 7:30 PM Rudder Theatre f I C K E f S: Call 845-1 234 Online at ojpas.taniiu.edu TAMU Student Ticket Prices only $10! MSC OPAS 2001-2002 Season Media Partners ***« mask HSE shhlxk-© m>*m \ Thursday, October I sions on Saturday and Sunday. Murphy Smith, an A&M professor of accounting, will speak on ethics in business Saturday morning. Dr. Smith will discuss the importance of personal integrity in the business world and society in general. Smith has collected data from students around the country and concludes that Texas A&M stu dents are more ethical than the average college student in America. Aggies do not have a problem addressing the second part of the honor code, tol erating others who lie or cheat. “To have the courage to confront somebody else who is not acting ethically is a real challenge, but I think that’s the key to the future of academic integrity on Texas A&M’s campus or anywhere else,” Smith said. Kibler and Dr. David Parrott. A&M’s Dean of Student Life, also will speak. McCabe has found cheating to be a nationwide problem in large and small institutions, yet schools like A&M that have honor ccxles and a sense of tradition are less likely to experience high levels of academic dishonesty. “A well-run, well-implemented honor code does significantly reduce the level of cheating” McCabe said. “Being in College Station, you tend to orient your life towards the campus, so it’s much easier to develop a community ethic.” The conference lasts Thursday through Sunday at the George Bush Presidential Conference Center. Students interested in attending the con ference may register until Friday evening. The office of the Vice President for Student Affairs will waive the registration fee for all students. Easterwood Continued from fy ^ rs ^ a 7’ both pedestrian gates; entrants to keep the gatesd No security guards were anywhere. "The security is notvisiti all times, but there are ew security measures in p this is not a dangerous avir area,” Happ said. “Wei want to cause an unneces alarm for people. Terroristi not going to pick on it planes. They have their site bigger targets.” Happ said the airport a not advertise many of theM rity measures so as “notton iving themse alarm.” Michael Chase, FAAm icltworkgoe er of av iation, security *" an,e men certification law not unusual for an airport size of Easterwood not lo 1 strict security on the genera! ation side because of thd X)L procedu Caring Aggi 5 provided th actly what g< mester of vo sal(1 ®jit begins fot Is for rides. “We go to th d we have a (walk ling if we’re i tance between the terminals the hangars. But a pottni 1 threat still exists in relam ’^j 11 unguarded hangars. ChawL llcalls s •The major threat » hi sm || y the lions is the air carriers, ani (from the pe would be impossible for soa id after that, it one to cross a runway w© !a.m..” Hueb getting caught,” Chase si CARPOOL “There is still the pod ^waiting fi threat. In theory, there shoulil usua H> some kinds of locks on fences more stringent secunty M , entoranaw£ ures, but there is really non ; gtime.” of shutting down access wi When the ca shutting down the activity.'' ntold, a junic The FAA does not reed ho will be do: general aviation sites in mi .,^ ur fy^ n ' n . , , We could be d ihere are no commercial pla ha|||K like Easterwood’s ham Brettne Vite C base said. :rs who “hers The FAA has taken a s lenwalking ai toward enforcing moreseemi "We basical] on general aviation follo»il' ot Wle, ai the Sept. 1 1 terrorist attacks an ' New York City and IMmy/J D.C. A final rule impkmtedi. the Federal Register roper certain aircraft operatots to search their aircraft ffli \o screen passengers and cte» members and their prior to departure. Easterwood operates in cot junction with A&M faculty,* dents and staff and Colle; Station and Bryan residentsi provide flights to Houston it to Dallas-Ft. Worth airports, Saturday, October 20,2001 Green Acres Ranch, RoyseCit) The Gourds Billy joe Shaver Eleven Hundred Springs Speedtrucker Houston Marchman Slick 52 The Wendel Brothers Molly Coddle Tickets only $15 thru startickets.cor, Albertson Stores, or 1-888-597-5131 www.ruralmusicfestival.com THE BATTALIO] Brady Creel Editor in Chief editor@tliebatt.com The Battalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published*!! Monday through Friday during the fall and sir! semesters and Monday through Thursday dirii summer session (except University holidays!! exam periods) at Texas A&M University. Peiiofe Postage Paid at College Station, TX 77840. ® MASTER: Send address changes to The SatM Texas A&M University, 1111 TAMU, College StafionT 77843-1111. News: The Battalion news department is m; students at Texas A&M University in the Diviswi Student Media, a unit of the Department! Journalism. News offices are in 014 Reed McW Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Far JO 2647; E-mail: newsroom@thebatt.com; Wei) * http://www.thebatt.com Advertising: Publication of advertising does not im|i! sponsorship or endorsement by The fialtata I! campus, local, and national display advertisingol 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-® Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonaW,# office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday tlMf Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services fs entitles each Texas A&M student to pick upas$ copy of The Battalion. First copy free, additional co[i4 254. 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