HURSDAYNOVEMBER 29, 2001 Texas A&M University 2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES Celebrating 125 Years n said. Defense led requests forre 60 of them, slant Florida I Richard Polin. ; *i jf defending the e state plans to court ruling. He my of the inmati asecutors should h ortunity to sub® nts from psvchoi 997. the U.S. S ipheld a similai ing that states m sex offenders l« their prison ter i court is now n latest issue k! irt is whether at offenders are. their behawo supreme Couik o\s an utter lack I NEWS IN BRIEF &M rooting out ersonal mail from n-campus service I COLLEGE STATION (AP) - Citing increased volume and * e risk to handlers of its jjjjniversity Mail Service, Texas ,&M has asked employees not send personal mail through le campus mail service. The request came in a nemorandum this month from Charles A. Sippial, vice resident for administration, e said only mail in appropri- ite departmental envelopes Jnd clearly identified as orig- Inating from the university Tystem or its affiliates should pe sent through the service. ; than 1,200 set onfined inISsti ive survived ninl :es and Florida's id. J on doing m\ hief was one of k of my mind.l at the end oftl to keep l)\e Ban This includes ki iders that willmal ? to them and f the story, he per. and that gr s and to take risl istillo said. "% but I'm not a&a the state attome;.: I mt that hurdle frerry hands out fiigher education awards Wednesday AUSTIN (AP) - Gov. Rick d the latestattii ferry handed out awards to see well-bal udents care ata ut. he said, i make people tin] so get them to d. “This is a ts here to learn, itor in chief t >er that become will test himasil he job.” Georgij how hard it is Mariano cares j Wednesday to five higher education programs for their efforts to close educational gaps in Texas. ■ The “Texas Higher Education Star Awards” ^ere given to Southwest fexas State University for its athworks summer pro ram; Texas A&M University t Corpus Christi for its First- Vear Learning Communities rogram; Texas Association if Community Colleges for s Virtual College of Texas rogram; Texas Tech 'niversity’s writing center nd University of Houston- owntown’s Jesse H. Jones cademic Institute. PUBLIC EYE F.V.I. NFL teams that have at least one Aggie on its current roster !22 of 31 TODAY Page 3A To fiy or NOT to fly SERVING THE TEXAS A&M C OMMUNITY N C E 1 8 S 3 Volume 108 • Issue 67 College Station, Texas www.thebatt.com State upholds records decision MSC meeting votes, minutes kept secret By Sommer Bunge THE BATTALION The Texas Attorney General’s office upheld the decision of Texas A&M offi cials Monday to keep secret the records and minutes of the Sept. 3 closed session of the Memorial Student Center (MSC) Council, which resulted in the removal of MSC Council President Josh Rowan. The attorney general’s office issued the opinion Monday in response to three open- records requests filed by The Battalion and the Btyan-College Station Eagle. Rowan, a senior agricultural develop ment major, was investigated by the University and later removed from his position by the MSC Council after allega tions of alcohol abuse, drug use and inap propriate sexual advances on a University-sponsored trip to Italy last summer. Rowan was a student leader on the two-week Champe Fitzhugh, Jr. International Honors Leadership Seminar, an MSC-affiliated program. The council, composed of students and MSC staff, reviewed the Department of Student Affairs investigation and, in the closed meeting, voted to remove Rowan. He appealed the decision, but later resigned. The University refused to release records of the meeting to members of the media, claiming that the informa tion related to Rowan’s student records Bonfire designs announced Cole unveils proposed plans to Student Senate By Sommer Bunge THE BATTALION Bonfire 2002 planners unveiled the three potential designs for the stack that could burn next November at the Student Senate meeting Wednesday. One design is a classic teepee, one design stacks logs of equal height against the interior framework and one design holds true to the recent Aggie Bonfires— a stack with logs of three different lengths that resemble previ ous Bonfires’ wedding-cake structure. All three meet A&M President Dr. Ray M. Bowen’s parameters of a single tier in which all logs touch the ground, and each stack will collapse inward as it bums, said Steering Committee Facilitator Dr. Bryan R. Cole. Each design stands 45 feet tall, is made of wooden logs and topped with an orange “t.u. frathouse” outhouse. Designs are posted on the Bonfire 2002 Website, at http://studentaffairs.tamu.edu/bonfire02, and at the Memorial Student Center and the Sterling C. Evans Library complex. The infrastructure of the three proposals is the same: four 40-foot central poles in the middle with a cross-bracing framework that creates a support system for the center of the stack. Four 30-foot independent logs will stand outside the central poles, and four more poles will stand outside those at the 15-foot level. All will be trussed and linked together, continuing the sup port system from the middle. Cole said. Professionals will put the 12 poles in place, bury ing them approximately 12-15 feet in the ground at the fenced-in site. A centerpole exists in each design, but that pole will not support the stack and will only support the weight of the outhouse. Cole said. Students, not professionals, will put in the center pole and fill in all the existing framework and logging, he said. After a final design is chosen and potentially approved by Bowen in late January, planning for 2002 will continue. A staff Bonfire director will be chosen, the design will go through extensive reviews, top-level student leaders will be selected and a prototype of the design will burn in May. If all goes well. Cole said. Bonfire construction will take place Nov. 11-24 between 6 a.m. and midnight each day. Each design uses 25,000 logs that will be cut and delivered to the site by professionals. Cole said. Students will vote and provide feedback on the designs Jan. 16-18. This period will be key to the success or failure of Bonfire 2002, Cole said. The feedback will serve as a gauge of student interest, and if not enough students respond. Cole said the committee will reevalu ate if students want to see a Bonfire bum in 2002. Students will receive notification and provide feed back through Neo, the University’s official email system. Lack of student support is one of the three poten tial obstacles to seeing a Bonfire burn next November, Cole said. If the safety firm does not sign off on the final design after the student feedback time this January, and if the cost becomes prohibitive, Cole said. Bonfire could be potentially stalled or stopped entirely for 2002. and was protected under the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA). Officials said they withheld the meeting minutes because the MSC Council dealt with the investigation and included it as part of the meeting records. In a letter addressed to A&M Deputy General Counsel Scott Kelly, Assistant Attorney General James Morris said the Attorney General’s office agreed with A&M’s decision to withhold the records. See Records on page 6A. Hopgood announces retirement | I - DESIGN C GRAPHICS COURTESY OF BONFIRE 2002 STEERING COMMITTEE Senate endorses services fee proposal By Elizabeth Raines THE BATTALION ADRIAN CALCANEO • THE BATTALION The Student Service Fee Advisory Board rejected the proposal from Vice President for Student Affairs Dr. J. Malon Southerland to spend the $1.1-million Student Services Fee surplus on a student leadership retreat center. In a plan unveiled to the Student Senate Wednesday, the board, comprising nine students, recommended reallocating the surplus among departments already receiv ing student service fee money, such as the Memorial Student Center and Student Health Services. “We didn’t feel like the student service fee should be used to build buildings,” said Suzanne Bolduc, SSFAB chair and senior mechanical engineering major. But the SSFAB suggested a separate fee to fund the construction of the proposed $37-million leadership center. The board also recommended main taining the current Student Service Fee rate of $11.86 per semester credit hour for See Senate on page 7A. HOPGOOD By Emily Peters THE BATTALION Maj. Gen. M.T. “Ted” Hopgood, the 37th commandant of cadets, announced Tuesday that he will retire May 31,2002. The man in charge of Texas A&M’s Corps of Cadets will step down after six years at A&M. Hopgood will also step down as head of the A&M School of Military Sciences. “When . I retired from the Marine Corps to become com mandant here, I anticipated five years of serv ice,” Hopgood said Tuesday. “I decided to stay an additional year in order to move several projects forward and to celebrate the Corps of Cadets’ 125th anniversary. “Mentoring and teaching Aggie cadets have been privileges I shall treasure forever,” Hopgood said. Under Hopgood, whose motto is “recruit, retain and graduate,” the Corps placed an emphasis on academics that has resulted in the highest level of cadet grades ever. He improved cadet recruitment policies, establishing a constant recruit ment rate during a nationwide period of decline in military See Hopgood on page 7A. Anti-war sentiment not present at A&M By Rob Phillips THE BATTALION Despite reports by a nonprofit educational advocacy group that universities are responsible for much of the anti-war sentiment in America, political science profes sors at Texas A&M believe the University is not among those opposed to the war. “There’s no hotbed of opposi tion over here, by any means,” said Dr. Edward Portis, a political science professor. Results from a study conduct ed by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) show that college and university faculty are the “weak link” in America’s response to the terror ist attacks on Sept. 11. Although 92 percent of the population is in favor of military force, academia is cited as the major sector show ing opposition. The study cited more than 100 statements by faculty and students on college campuses across the See War on page 7A.