EDNESDAYNOVEMBER 28, 2001 Texas A&M University 1 SECTION • 12 PAGES Celebrating 125 Years 32 ERA ices for 5 year after 75 ERA in 2 1 career record L 3n ger$ staff for the ow, with a 1 ERA. Tea, s (968) and fe other team. iJS ill Care : ULL SET 19.00 Expires t2i?5^ rse JACUZZI SPA mi 23.00 and up £ocxi at this loau s FiASt r ,‘i NEWS IN BRIEF pan sentenced for jsexual assault, |to pay $150 million BRYAN (AP) - Behrooz I'Bruce” Daftarian, a jecruiter for Doug Hunter Enterprises, was sentenced life in prison for sexually Assaulting children who were blients at his modeling studio has been ordered to pay five pfthem about $150 million. On Monday, District Judge Rick Davis ordered Daftarian, vho was convicted of aggra vated sexual assault in March, [to pay one victim $29.7 mil lion. He ordered Daftarian to (pay the other four victims &30.2 million each. iHouston law library [to get flood funding |to replace lost books HOUSTON (AP) - The University of Houston's O'Quinn Law Library will receive $21.4 million in fed eral funding to replace 174,000 law books and a microfiche storage collection lost in June during flooding from Tropical Storm Allison. The funding, announced Monday by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, will replace materi als damaged when eight feet of water flooded the library’s lower level. The federal funding is pro viding 75 percent of the $28!5 million price tag to buy the new books and microfiche col lection. The rest of the money come from local sources. r.yj. Number of international students at A&M in Fall 2000 3,479 PUBLIC EYE ers tulips) 5 ; Accepted -2p-n!. TODAY Ear^iia Page 3 To the slopes Students remember fun, scary experiences on the slopes mini it YOU" 1 drains 1 tfer._ExpV«: 12/3'S Aggies up and rolling * 3-0 team signs another prep star for 2002-2003 Page 11 )i d receiv e ust 5 !^! Brazos Valley on ice • Ice at exposition center would benefit community m=KUii=m OOOOOOOO OO0OOQQO HIGH 42° F LOW 34° F TOMORROW w HIGH 47° F LOW a 30° f FORECASTS COURTESY OF www.weathermanted.com A&M considers forgoing Easterwood Sippial: University needs out of airport business By Amanda Smith THE BATTALION Texas A&M officials have indicated an interest in relinquishing ownership of Easterwood Airport in the near future, along with a possible relocation. Charles Sippial, vice president for administration, said the growing University campus must continue to reassess its goals in relation to the airport. “Owning and operating an airport is not a University function. It is our desire that a public entity operate the airport,” Sippial said. Sippial said state projections indicate the number of Texans needing a degree will exceed the state capability by 2015 and that A&M may need to expand cur rent facilities. “There is increasing pressure to admit more undergraduate students,” Sippial said. “We must be in a position to assist our state to meet this demand. Our research needs are also expanding and they will require additional land and facilities.” John Happ, director of aviation of Easterwood Airport, said discussions have indicated that ownership of the air port located on Raymond Stotzer Parkway could change in the next five years, although relocation is not likely to occur for another 20 to 25 years. “There are a lot of questions that have not been answered,” Happ said. “There still has to be lots of research done, as with anytime you move a Targe trans portation facility.” Sippial said the airport has continued to extend its service beyond the immedi ate A&M community, reaching into greater Bryan-College Station. “We built our airport because there was not one that met our need at the time, nor was there a public entity that could have done so,” Sippial said. “Over the years, the airport has grown to serve the See Easterwood on page 2. TKE decides against appeal By BRANDIE LlFFICK THE BATTALION The Texas A&M chapter of the Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE) fraternity was given a deferred suspension until June l, 2002, for violating University stu dent organization rules con cerning alcohol and pledging. TKE had until 5 p.m. Monday to file an appeal against the punishment. “We did work with Thomas Danner (president of the A&M chapter of TKE) and it was decided not to file an appeal,” said Kevin M. Mayeux, chief executive of TKE national headquarters. “A deferred sus pension is a common punish ment given to national organi zations by institutions for vari ous offenses. This is not an uncommon punishment.” Dean of Student Life Dr. David Parrott said that until June, TKE is not in good standing with the University. “That basically means that they will not have a vote in the Interfratemity Council,” Parrott said. “The allegations, investi gation and hearing created an opportunity for learning and growth for all involved. The true measure of the impact of this series of events will be the resulting changes in this group.” University rules stipulate that fraternity rush events are to be alcohol-free. In early Sept., junior polit ical science major Clay Cunningham said the TKE organization provided alco hol for minors, hazed pledges and was discriminatory against him because of his sexual orientation. Cunningham said in an interview in Oct. that the organization asked him to turn See T KE on page 2. Flying saucer BRETT MARETH •THE BATTALION Jeff Hughes and Tim Thornton, freshman engineering majors, launch a frisbee from a device they constructed for ENGR 111. The launcher was required to propel a frisbee through a target up to 30 feet away. B-CS unemployment rate remains low By Melissa Sullivan THE BATTALION As the nation faces mounting unemployment rates of 5.4 per cent and Texas faces similar increases in the number of workers seeking employment, the Bryan-College Station area continues to weather the storm of layoffs and job cuts with unemployment rates of l .7 and 1.5 percent. Bryan-College Station offi cials say the area’s saving grace is Texas A&M , which employs a large sector of the local popu lation and is immune to fluctua tions in the economy. In a recent report released by the Texas Workforce Commission, Bryan-College Station has the lowest unem ployment rate among the Metropolitan Statistical Areas at 1.5 percent for the month of October. This figure is down from the month of September, in which College Station showed a rate of 1.8 percent and Bryan at 1.7 percent. “In general, if you look at university communities through out the Midwest who lack high technology-like jobs, they con tinue to have a low rate of unem ployment,” said Roland Mower, president and CEO of the Bryan- College Station Economic Development Corporation. According to the report, cities such as Lubbock and Waco have unemployment rates considerably lower then the state figure, which stands at 5.2 percent for the month of October and is up from the September figure of 5.0 percent. “Cities like that are not finely developed,” Mower said. Cities like Austin that offer a higher number of technolo gy-based jobs suffer more. Mower said. Houston Austin Waco Lubbock OCT 2001 SEPT 2001 4.3% 5.6% 4.5% 5.2% 3.7% 4.9% 2.2% 2.4% 1.5% 1.75% Areas like Bryan-College Station are better suited to sur vive economic recessions. Mower said. “We have a strong foundation for further diversification and being in the same town as Texas A&M University is just icing on the cake,” Mower said. CHAD MALIAM • THE BATTALION Being in a small town also can have an effect on the way compa nies recruit new employees. “The low rate df unemploy ment can make it easier for a company to recruit and give spe cial circumstances, but that just See Rate on page 9. Castillo appointed as Spring 2002 editor By Sommer Bunge THE BATTALION Mariano Castillo’s first experience with The Battalion was carrying stacks of the newspaper to his upperclass men’s rooms on the Quadrangle, shouting, “Dah- nah-nah-nah, Batt Fish!” The Texas A&M Corps of Cadets tradition of using freshmen to collect the stu dent newspaper from Corps Headquarters sent Castillo and classmates in Fall 1998 running through the Corps living area with towels around their necks and belts around their heads. When Castillo, an interna tional studies and journalism major, took a job writing for The Battalion s Aggielife section the spring of his freshman year, he did not know where it could take him. A- Muster feature Castillo wrote for the news paper that April earned him and his Corps buddies junior privileges for the day. which, in the Corps allows a fresh- See Castillo on page 12. JOHN LIVAS • THE BATTALION Mariano Castillo will head The Battalion for Spring 2002 as editor in chief. Robinson to head petro department By Tanya Nading THE BATTALION Ranked the No. 1 undergraduate engineering department with Ph.D. programs and the best graduate program in 2002 by U.S. News and World Report, the petroleum engineering department is under the direction of a new department head. Dr. Ronald James Robinson. Robinson was appointed department chair on Nov. 12. As the new department head, Robinson said he wants to do many things to ensure that the department remains among the best in the nation. “As a department, we will continue to produce the best students and recruit on a global basis, since petroleum engineering is a glob al field, and we will build up the graduate programs and research program substitution,” Robinson said. Robinson has a bachelor of science in math and physics from See Petroleum o?i page 9.