I 20,155; AGGIE CULTURE IN PRINT From good bull to Muster, Aggie au thors show tradition through books. Aggielife, Page 3 were ven |' a lot;; I ■o said. •; like that I THE EXPRESS YOURSELF Robbins and Clark: The Battalion provides many opportunities for students at A&M. Opinion, Page 9 Provisioj 1 caution, ere a 1 concern; i ffSted® oL 101, No. 136 (10 pages) | 1 1 ■ , ■ HI nn abocti dsey said I right.” supporteil ecifiesthfl - regent; I “Serving Texas A&M since 1893” ouse votes to expand Aggie Bucks SWC CHAMPIONSHIPS The Texas A&M tennis teams vie for the conference titles this weekend. Sports, Page 7 to off-campus use hat pr □ If the Texas Senate passes “ithinkhe bill, students will be able surprisin' to purchase books, souvenirs, 3en abjand food from off-campus was dis! vendors. nal pmil ants tost By Wes Swift so that 9(11 he Battalion studentil r collegel The Texas House of Representatives 3rovisicJ : P asse< l a bill Thursday to expand the remedhi Aggie Bucks system to off-campus use. I House Bill 3122, sponsored by Rep. 1 help foil Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, gives the Texas need it A&M Board of Regents the ability to cre- oncem:|ate a debit card system provided that illy elimf Tuch cards shall not be limited exclu sively to on-campus use for essentially the same merchandise or services.” The bill will now be sent to the Texas Senate. Before the vote, Ogden said that he saw little opposition to the bill. “This is not a controversial bill,” Ogden said Wednesday. “I expect very little opposition.” John Haney, owner of Texas Aggie Bookstores, said he supported the bill and knew no reason to oppose it. “I think it’s wonderful,” Haney said. “I don’t see why anybody would oppose something that’s good for the University and the students. I’m looking forward to seeing it pass through the Senate.” Although expansion may cause funds to be diverted from the University to other businesses. Dr. Jerry Gaston, in terim vice president for finance and ad ministration, said the University has no reservations about the bill. “The issue here is that Aggie Bucks serve the students,” Gaston said. “If the students wish to spend their Aggie Bucks off-campus, they should be able to do so.” Haney said that although he was not sure which products or services would be eligible for Aggie Bucks purchase, the University has expressed some concerns. “The only concern the University has expressed to local businesses is that alco hol could not be purchased,” Haney said. “But I feel certain that restaurants that do not sell alcohol will be included.” Ogden said that “the same merchan dise or services” clause should be inter preted on a practical basis. “The clause will be interpreted like a reasonable person would understand it,” Ogden said. “It is not meant to be excessively narrow.” Gaston said he expects students will able to purchase items like books, sou venirs and food. He said that although details are not ready, there are plans for selecting which vendors will be giv en the Aggie Bucks option. “Businesses will have to apply,” Gaston said. Gaston said he hopes to add the off- campus vendors quickly, but noted that the present exclusive contract with Barnes and Noble, Inc., who owns and operates the bookstore in the MSC, must be renegotiated. “We have to renegotiate first,” Gas ton said. “Obviously they paid for the option. But, I think the renegotiations will go smoothly.” Ogden said he expected the vendors to pay for any expansion costs. “This bill does not imply that any costs for setting up the expansion will be borne by the University,” Ogden said. “In fact, I expect most of that cost to go to the vendors who use Aggie Bucks.” The Aggie Bucks System came un der question amid concerns that uni versities could profit from the interest earned from the money in debit card accounts. Last April, Texas Banking Commis sioner Catherine Ghiglieri sent a let ter to state Attorney General Dan Morales asking for a decision on whether debit card systems at univer sities should be regulated. Earlier this winter local business men and the University agreed to have House Bill 3122 filed and voted on by the state Legislature. tires ARF proposes ways to diversify MSC artwork LS )ance win. ige for Sel ng Dane; ecause w to someo: • Muster.' a big ck r to org«l help." c will n Spent; )ance w: . Seni!'- 35 tiefe | ents. se pictanj T-shirt; C hallwa! 3 p.m. □ The Appropriate Repre sentation of Facilities task force recommended the changes to make the art work more representative of the A&M student body. By Gretchen Perrenot The Battalion • ; The Memorial Student Center ^artwork may be updated to repre sent A&M’s diverse student body, if Recommendations made by the MSC Appropriate Representation of Facil ities task force are implemented. The ARF task force has drafted 12 recommendations and will final ize the plan April 29. The recommendations will go to the MSC Council for approval and then to the University Center for approval of funding and implementation. The MSC Council created the task force in March in response to campus wide discussion on diversity issues. The 28-member group repre sents various MSC and campus mi nority organizations. Kevin Carreathers, director for the Department of Multicultural Services, said the task force was needed because of the historical changes in minority representation at A&M. “There was no need to have a rep resentation of a diverse student body in the past, because there was n’t one,” Carreathers said. “Now there is. Problems can be managed better if people feel part of an inclu sive atmosphere.” Carreathers said no single recom mendation is more important than the others. Jimmy Charney, ARF chairman, said the major recommendations deal with the artwork in the meeting rooms and throughout the complex. “Some of the artwork in the MSC is significant to the building or was donated, but a lot of the artwork is not,” Charney said. “So these are the things we are looking at.” Charney said the artwork is be hind the times at A&M because of the changes the school has been through over the years. “The whole university was once a military institution, but has explod ed into something different,” Char ney said. “Students are no longer all cadets and more diverse cultures are represented in the student body. “The College of Liberal Arts is expanding and the University has moved from an agricultural and mechanical curriculum to a full university.” The recommendations include creating another wood carving in ad dition to the carvings in the first floor hallway next to the Flag Room. The ARF recommendations sug gest that the carvings are not up-to- date and should represent the diverse student life and cultures at A&M. See ARF, Page 6 Cadets gear up for March to the Brazos 0 The Corps hopes to raise $50,000 for the March of Dimes as a result of march to and from the Brazos River Saturday. By Gretchen Perrenot The Battalion The Corps of Cadets will march 15 miles to and from the Brazos River Saturday to support the Bryan-College Station March of Dimes. The cadets started collecting donations for the March of Dimes in December to reach a goal of $50,000. As of Wednesday, the Corps had almost reached its I goal with $40,000 collected. [i The money goes toward a $1,000 scholarship for a medical student and research for the March of Dimes, which provides support to children with birth defects. ; Ashley Coleman, Bryan-College Station division direc- ; tor for the March of Dimes, said working with the Corps f has been wonderful because the Corps is so organized. i; Each outfit is sponsoring an Ambassador Child who Ijhas benefited from the March of Dimes, she said, and jghe Ambassador Children met with cadets for dinner at [ Duncan Dining Hall. ; “Most of the children are handicapped in some way,” Coleman said. “It was interesting to see the reactions from the Corps.” 1 Kyle Hendrick, chairman for the March to the Bra- ||os, said the children took a tour of the Corps Center [tfind met with the Corps leaders. “The kids and parents loved it,” Hendrick said. “A lot of cadets aren’t familiar with what the March of Dimes does. “The dinner helped put a name and a face to the cause.” Brennan Dobbs, first sergeant for the March to the Brazos committee, said working with the children helped him see how important the march was to them and their families. Dobbs has raised the most money individually for the past two years. He raised $1,200 his freshman year and $1,400 last year. Hendrick said the March to the Brazos is an annual event that began in old Army days. “It originally was held on April Fool’s Day,” Hendrick said. “To keep the cadets from getting into trouble and playing pranks, they would be marched out to the river.” The event was restarted in 1972 as a fundraiser for the March of Dimes. The cadets will step off from the Quad at 7:30 Satur day morning and head down Joe Routt and across West Campus. From there they will take FM 60 all the way to the river. When they reach the river, the cadets will pass on the new positions for next year, Hendrick said. “The seniors give positions to the juniors, the juniors to the sophomores and so on,” he said. “The seniors ride back on buses and the Corps marches back with the new leaders in position.” Hendrick said this, like Elephant Walk, signifies the seniors’ last days as cadet leaders. Nick Rodnicki/THE Battalion Raycing to the top David Briner, a senior electrical engineering major, attaches one of the drive belts on his team’s sunraycer in Thompson hall on Thursday afternoon. When complete, the sunraycer will compete in Sunrayce ’95 in June and will travel 1,100 miles from Indi anapolis, Indiana to Golden, Colorado. Two men sought in Oklahoma bombing □ Governor tells of discovery that would double the death toll to more than 100. OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- “Upwards of 50” more bodies were found in j ust one area of the bombed-out federal building, the governor said today, a number that would double the death toll to more than 100. “And this is not an area that they anticipat ed finding this number of individuals,” Gov. Prank Keating told ABC’s “Good Morning America.” Earlier, Jon Hansen, assistant fire chief, had said that in addition to the 52 confirmed dead in Wednesday’s blast, rescuers were “working in areas now where we’ve got a sig nificant amount of fatalities.” “We didn’t expect that many in that loca tion ... upwards of 50,” Keating said. “Unfortunately, the news is not real good this morning,” the governor said. Late Thursday, the confirmed death toll rose to 52, and officials said 150 more were still missing in the tangled rubble of the Al fred P. Murrah Federal Building. More than 400 people were injured, many slashed by fly ing glass or buried helplessly under doors, walls and concrete beams. Investigators, scouring the heartland and far beyond, issued warrants for two John Doe suspects. A tattoo and a crew cut were about all that distinguished sketches of the suspects from countless other medium-build white men. They were believed to have rented the truck that carried the half-ton homemade bomb, FBI Agent Weldon Kennedy said. Their identities — and their motive — were unknown, Kennedy said. He speculated they may have wanted “some revenge on the feder al government as an entity or one of the agen cies housed in that building.” As President Clinton promised “swift and certain and severe” justice. Attorney General Janet Reno announced a $2 million reward for See Bomb, Page 4 Aggies to call Muster tonight □ Aggies from around the world will gather to re member those who have passed on. By Kasie Byers The Battalion Students and former students will call the Muster tonight at 7 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum and around the world. Muster began in 1883 as a track and field day for students and alumni and as a celebration of Texas’ victory at the Battle of San Jacinto April 21. In later years, because more Aggie students and alumni were unable to attend the event because of the wars, roll call was taken for the absent. Today the Aggie Muster ceremony recognizes the Aggies who have died during the past year by conducting roll call for them. Fellow Aggies in attendance an swer “here” to the call. This year’s Muster will include a barbecue at the Academic Plaza grounds in front of the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross. Kim Greebon, sub-chair for devel opment with the Aggie Muster Com mittee, said the barbecue is a fairly new event that has been a part of the Muster tradition for about five years. “The barbecue helps to re-estab lish the camaraderie among Aggies, which was the purpose of the first Musters,” she said. “The barbecue reinforces that Muster is not only a reverence for the dead, but a cele bration of life as well.” The barbecue, which will take place from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. today. See Muster, Page 2 Corps members fire a twenty-one gun salute at Aggie Muster 1994.