T A M U i n >en -extatiij ehoot )rity,: v e aui^ yerbt etj ies amlij manyo!; -d howj sentijt; iblicati s werej be atilf way atn ith. a true a; of the out W|)| What is truth? Keith Mitchell looks like A&M's next great inebacker. Sports, Page 9 Brown: The Veritas forum engaged minds but raised many questions. Opinion, Page 13 FORUM. Tried tradition Sbisa Yell faces changes in the face of a crack down by Food Services. Aggielife, Page 4 S'- -V:': i viewol e womfrj tyt| t is noil] o of ear ■itinga jy my e I tf Timers'; who ing hetj was fern I thint; more!| eministsl everk l. 102, No. 45 (14 pages) Established in 1893 Friday • October 27, 1995 Taking care of business Campus leaders meet at roundtable MyC4 Classi AM ry tf j 1 arei tt’s coverl ntry teij coupler ion of ill ,4. 'oblem.' ngeverj'l k, the 1 their eM strong ri iners, i Etchb hreeinilj Please^ i the full □ A student liaison to the Board of Regents was among the topics for discussion during the meeting Thursday. By Heather Pace The Battalion Student leaders discussed Uni versity issues to promote campus unity Thursday night in the MSC. Led by David Washington, Stu dent Government executive vice president and a senior political sci ence major, the second roundtable this semester was attended by leaders from groups including the NAACP, Corps of Cadets and Col lege Republicans. Washington said the roundtable allowed student leaders to con verse about what is not discussed in normal situations and to get to understand each other better. “It is intended to be a sound ing board for ideas so we can come together and strengthen relations,” he said. Members began the roundtable with an update on the status of the cultures proposal. Chris Reed, Student Senate speaker pro tern and a junior fi nance major, briefed those attend ing about the Senate’s three cul tures proposals, which will be filed at noon today. One proposal would allow col leges to set up culture courses for themselves. The second would support the Faculty Senate pro posal, and the third would take the middle ground, adjusting His tory 105 and 106 to fit broad cul tural requirements. Reed said he expects the final proposal will call for no require ments in the future. David Brown, College Republi cans president and a junior politi cal science major, said the majori ty of the student body does not support these requirements. Shawn Williams, NAACP presi dent and a senior management major, said students are against the proposal only because they do not know what it entails. The open dialogue among lead ers was continued throughout the evening as events concerning cam pus unity were addressed. Washington suggested the idea of a “Unity Day,” which would consist of teams chosen by lottery, enabling different campus groups to interact. Marc Mulkey, Corps represen tative and a senior industrial dis tribution major, mentioned that the All-University Barbecue that is being sponsored by the Corps this Friday as one attempt to al low the student body to see through stereotypes. “The biggest problem in today’s society is the misrepresentation of what an organization is like,” Mulkey said. Events such as the barbecue, Whoopstock and Chili Cook-off will hopefully ease conflict among different groups, he said. Alan Watson, Conservative Coalition president and a sopho more agricultural economics ma jor, said smaller group interac tions would benefit the campus more than large groups. Washington said he wants to increase the amount of campus de bates and co-programming, such as those coordinated by MSC, to help organizations build bridges to campus unity. Also a much debated topic was the issue of a student liaison on the Board of Regents. Williams said that because the student liaison would have such a high turnover, the position would not be as effective as students would like it to be. Mulkey said it is in the stu dents’ hands to let their opinions be known to the regents. “The Corps is sending represen tative to every event we can,” he said. “Students must take it upon themselves to put the regents in their environment.” Williams mentioned an incident in which a regent asked him at the Board’s Oct. 12 open house how the students felt about the fee in creases. The regent should have already known the students’ re sponse to the increases, he said. Washington said the roundta bles should enable leaders to re turn to their organizations and ex press a different slant about other organizations to members. Forum addressed students’ issues □ Administrators and student leaders discussed campus safety, the general use fee increase and parking problems Thursday. By Kristen Homyk The Battalion MSC Political Forum hosted “A&M’s Leadership: Where Is It Leading Us,” a panel discussion including several campus leaders and administrators who answered concerns and ques tions Thursday. Dr. Ray Bowen, Texas A&M president; Dr. Pierce Cantrell, Faculty Senate speaker; Becky Silloway, Student Senate speaker; and Patrick Conway, MSC Council president, ad dressed issues brought forth by the thirty students, faculty members and staff members who attended the public forum. Foremost in the discussion were the heated issues on stu dents’ minds, beginning with the general use fee. Bowen said that before last June, the general use fee for state universities was capped by the state Legislature at Sl2 per semester credit hour. When the Texas Legislature was forced to cut the budgets of public institutions, it removed the cap and allowed universities to increase their general use fees to equal tuition fees, he said. See Forum, Page 7 Robyn Calloway, The Battalion Test run Senior aerospace engineering major Bryan Duke tests the aerodynamics of his design class project in the wind tunnel at East- erwood Airport Thursday afternoon. MSC Council celebrates center’s 45th anniversary □ The number of programs and students involved in Memorial Student Center activities has increased over the years. By Lily Aguilar The Battalion The MSC’s 45th anniversary gives MSC Council members and students time for reflec tion and celebration. Jonathan Neerman, Council executive vice president for relations and a senior political science major, said the Council will have a cake-cutting ceremony 45 minutes after the A&M-University of Hous ton football game Saturday. “We’re having two former MSC Council presidents speak, Dr. J.T.L. McNew and Jim Ray,” Neer man said. “Patrick Conway (MSC Council president) and Jim Reynolds (MSC director) will also give speeches about the MSC.” The festivities will allow students to learn about the progress the MSC Council has made since its founding in 1950. ’“We are hoping for a good mix of for- versary form. Th bers j way, :c- nk, ue JJL. - nf r y- |||f sa; mer ^ wr nific. mer and present students,” Neerman said. “It should give current students a sense of history about the MSC. “Former students can see how things have changed with the times. I think the current MSC organizations can get a better grasp of all that has been put into programming by talking to the former members.” Neerman said the MSC’s mission, statement has changed to reflect the students, but has remained true to form. The MSC has come a Ion, he said, and will contin- to improve. “I see changes in the next five years in the amount and quality of programs because of the increase in fund ing,” he said. Liz Rayburn, Coun cil public relations chair and a junior bio medical science major, said the anniversary is sig nificant to students through out the University. More stu dents should get involved with MSC organizations, she said. “I want to move into the 21st centu ry with a boom,” Rayburn said. “In the year 2000, we’ll be 50 years old, and I’d like to see expansion. The MSC programs are addressing topics that reach a more diverse group See MSC, Page 7 Student dies after accident IK 3IT Christopher H. Stehouwer, a sopho more biomedical sciences major, died Thursday as the result of falling out of a moving truck near Hearne, University police reported. Bob Wiatt, UPD director, said Ste houwer, a 20-year-old from San Antonio, was returning from gathering bamboo for a fraternity event when he fell from the truck around 4 a.m. Stehouwer was admitted to St. Joseph Regional Health Center in Bryan and was pronounced brain dead around 5 p.m., Wiatt said. University Relations re ported that Stehouwer’s family, friends and University staff members were pre sent at the hospital. Students needing assistance concern ing this incident can call Student Coun seling Services at 845-4427 or 845-2700. Jurors sentence Saldivar to life term for Selena’s murder □ About 100 fans of the slain Tejano music star celebrated Thursday's verdict in Houston. HOUSTON (AP) — Devotees of slain Tejano music star Selena whooped it up a second time Thursday when Yolanda Saldivar drew' a life prison term from the same jurors who convicted her of murder. “I can scream nowq” said Natividad Rodriguez, age 54, of Houston. “This is a time when you can scream in the middle of the street. Yeah!” A crowd of about 100 Selena fans gathered, as they have throughout Saldivar’s trial, to awmit the jury's decision on punishment. After nine hours of deliberation over two days, the panel decided on a life prison term, the maxi mum punishment under consideration. Jurors did not impose the S10.000 fine sought by prosecutors. On Monday, the same 12 jurors found Saldivar, founder of the Selena fan club, guilty in the March 31 shooting death of a 23-year-old rising music star, who was immensely popular in the Hispanic community. Thursday’s crowd was spirited. Selena fans held poster-sized photographs of the singer, mugged for the dozens of television cameras and waved signs demanding that Saldivar be sent to prison for life. Minutes after word of the verdict spread around Houston, downtown streets began filling with horn-honking Selena fans headed toward the cour thouse. They passed to the crowd’s cheers. More than a dozen police officers, including sever al mounted patrols, stood watch outside the building. Rodriguez, a Harris County worker who said she had stood vigil outside the building throughout the 2 1/2-week trial, said Saldivar’s punishment fit her crime. “I think so, because she (Saldivar) is still alive. Her family can still see her,” Rodriguez said. “But look at poor Selena. Where is she?” Saldivar will not be eligible for parole until the year 2025. That’s long enough for Selena fan Melissa Santos, age 25, of Houston. “I'm happy it is over and she got what she de served," Santos said. “She’ll suffer within those years. It wun’t bring Selena back, but it’s some satisfaction.” AP File Photo Yolanda Saldivar is escorted to a Texas Department of Public Safety airplane in Corpus Christi Oct. 3, for transfer to Houston to stand trial. Saldivar was con victed of murdering Selena in a Corpus Christi motel room March 31.