Sc ]VE U N V R Y A MATTER OF SIZE I SCIENTIFIC PROOF Machines create problems for shorter students in weight training classes. Aggielife, Page 3 Baxter: Scientific evidence linking homosexuality with heredity could stir the world. Opinion, Page 15 Run and gun The Lady Aggie Basketball team sets a school record in an 111 -83 victory. Sports, Page 11 Battalion 102, No. 59 (16 pages) Established in 1893 Thursday " November 16, 1995 tudent Senate passes cultures bill Senate passes, introducespAer bills I he Senate debated two cultures bills Wednesday night. The final bill would allow individual colleges to implement the cultures requirement. By Tara Wilkinson The Battalion I The Texas A&M Student Senate ittssed a bill Wednesday night stating that the student body “as a whole” does not support a core curriculum cultures I requirement, but that if the adminis tration decides the requirement is nec essary, the decision to implement it should be left to individual colleges and departments. The American and International Cultures Proposal states that since “decisions concerning curriculum are best made by those who are experts in their respective fields,” changes to curriculum should be made by each department and college after they research the issue themselves. The bill calls for college and department administrators to weigh several factors in their curriculum decisions, including the expanding global economy, cul tural diversity in the workplace and a need for “increased understanding and awareness of U.S. minority or interna tional peoples.” Many senators opposed the bill be cause they wanted the Senate to take a stronger stand, for or against, cultures course requirements. Some senators said this bill is nothing more than a “politically correct way to say we don’t want a cultures course.” But J. J. Wilson, an engineering senator, said accusations that the bill is “watered down” are unfair and inaccurate. “It does make a stand,” Wil son said. “It says we want the colleges to make their own re quirements. That’s the stand.” Senators favoring the Ameri can and International Cultures Proposal said the bill should not be interpreted as a message that multi- culturalism is unimportant. Jason Waligura, an engineering sen ator and a junior petroleum engineer ing major, said the bill provides the See Cultures, Page 5 In other business, the Student Senate passed two bills: ♦ Common Final Exams Bill: The Sen ate rejects the concept of common final ex ams, which involves giving the same test to all sections of a course. If common final exams are enacted, the bill requests that exams not be scheduled on readings days; exams be curved on a sectional, not de partmental basis; the course syllabus in clude an overview of testable material; a common text be used; and common finals be implemented first for courses that al ready have common midterms. * Health Excuse Policy: Because the service at A.P. Beutel Health Center has slowed due to many students seeking ex cuses for missed classes, the Senate calls for a stricter attendance policy. The new policy specifies that instead of students just being treated, a physician must deter-; mine that students were too ill to attend class or were contagious. The new policy would also require students to provide ex cuses by the end of the next, working day if an absence occurs on an exam day. Three new bills were introduced to the Student Senate. The bills will be debated at the next Senate meeting, scheduled for Nov. 29. * Southside Mail Drop Box Bill: The Senate requests that a blue mail drop box be placed in a Southside location, See Bills, Page 5 Amy Browning, The Battalion Park pals Sophomores Bianca Maldonado, an industrial engineering major, and Angie Garza, a civil engi neering major, feed bread to the ducks in Research Park Wednesday. Conference to focus on campus diversity issues Stone stresses need for strong, risk-taking American leaders □ Chuck Stone was the first African-American man hired to do television commentary and served as an adviser to U.S. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. By Heather Pace The Battalion Professor Chuck Stone, first president of the National Black Journalists Association, urged students Wednesday to refuse mediocre leader ship and to steps to better the nation. Stone began by emphasizing the importance of “paying your civic rent.” Students should use col lege to further both their intellect and moral char acter to prepare them for leadership roles, he said. About 30 people filled 601 Rudder Tower to hear Stone, who served as an adviser to U.S. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and was the first African-American man hired to do televi sion commentary. Shane Elkins, The Battalion Chuck Stone urged students to refuse mediocre leadership at a speech Wednesday. - Stone said many factors go into the making of a leader, including high intellect, steadfastness of purpose, ideological consistency, charisma and the courage to take risks. See Stone, Page 9 □ The Drive in for Diversity coordinators said the conference will allow administrators and faculty members to better serve students' needs. By Heather Pace The Battalion At a time when multicultural issues are a heated topic of debate, the seventh annual Drive in for Diversity Conference will explore diver sity issues Nov. 17. Becky Petit, conference chair woman and diversity education co ordinator, said the conference should broaden the perspectives of faculty members and admin istrators at A&M. “More than just a single day to reflect on our heritage, the conference is a call to action,” Petit said. “It is an annual op portunity to expand awareness of diversity issues and their valu able impact on our professions.” The theme of the drive is Pluribus Unum: Out of Many, One” and focuses on diversity in higher education. “We can all bring our differences to the table, but we can still be one” Petit said. “This is where our theme comes from.” Sessions will include: “Minority Athletes: Winners or Losers in the Academy,” “UPD and Me: A Need for Understanding,” “Diversity in Cyberspace: Using the Internet to Find Multi- cultural Resources” and “Gender Bias: A Multi cultural Issue.” Kevin Carreathers, Department of Multicul tural Services director, said the conference will remind people about the importance of continu ing to discuss diversity issues. “The conference will continue to send mes sages to the University and keep diversity issues in the forefront,” Carreathers said. “It will build a stronger sense of campus community.” The conference will be divided into two sets of three concurrent sessions, two keynote addresses and a question-and answer session during lunch. Dr. Eric Jolly, an Education Development Cen ter senior scientist, will give the morning keynote speech, “Respecting Cultural Differences and Cultivating Diversity.” The question-and-answer ses sion will provide an opportunity for audience members to ask specific questions about the ; multicultural issue, and Jolly’s \ afternoon keynote address will elaborate on the morning keynote in a speech entitled, “Strengths and Weaknesses of a Multicultural Class.” Petit said these sessions will have positive ramifications for A&M because they focus on the pros and cons of a multicultural curriculum and diversity issues relating to the changing needs and identities of students. “We, as professionals, need to be prepared to meet their needs,” she said. The conference will enable administrators and faculty members to serve the needs of the See Diversity, Page 9 Institutions need to assess, improve diversity climate □ Dr. Sylvia Hurtado's speech was broadcast at other universities in the System. By Lisa johnson The Battalion Dr. Sylvia Hurtado said Wednesday that academic in stitutions must make a con scious effort to increase diversi ty on campus. Hurtado, a University of Michigan sociology professor and a member of the Center for the Study of Higher Education and Post secondary Education, studied 6,000 students at 300 universities nationwide. Hurtado’s speech was broad cast simultaneously at five oth er universities in the System. Hurtado also discussed the Common Destiny Alliance, a group with goals to confront racial issues and reduce preju dice among students in kinder garten through high school. While the CDA is helping to reduce racial and ethnic ten sions, Hurtado said, steps need to be taken to improve the “cli mate” for diversity at universi ties across the nation. “Often when we think of the climate of something, we think of something that is uncontrollable,” she said. “The climate for diversi ty can be changed, however. “In an effort to change the climate, it is crucial that people recognize the problem and its dimensions, and then take steps to rectify problems or make improvements where they are needed.” An institution’s climate for diversity, Hurtado said, in cludes the school’s historical legacy of inclusion or exclusion of ethnic and racial minorities, the school’s percentage of mi nority enrollment, the percep tion of racial tension among students and interaction among the races on campus — both positive and negative. Although the legacy of exclu sion or inclusion differs from university to university, Hurta do’s study showed that interra cial interaction of a positive na ture, such as dating and study ing, is most frequent between African-American, Asian and Hispanic minority groups and is less frequent between whites and minorities. Interracial interaction of a negative nature, including dis crimination and harassment in the classroom, occurred most fre quently among the African Americans and was felt equally between the whites and Hispan- ics who were part of the study. In her speech, Hurtado dis cussed how to improve diversity. See Climate, Page 9