The Battalion me 103 • Issue 18 • 14 Pages Wednesday, September 25, 1996 The Batt Online: http://bat-web.tamu.edu Hispanic Heritage JVlonth eakers stress politics, community By Erica Roy The Battalion speakers from the Mexican- an Political Association (MAPA) sed Texas A&M students about the tance of be- active in poli- 1 their commu- iiesday night. Navarro, the lal director of rerside, Calif., chapter, and sa Valdez, the F” ^’^■ljii§l of the San | idino chapter, invited to by the Hispanic Business Stu- ssociation, Ballet Folkloricos tial and the Rio Grande Valley town Club. arro stressed that Hispanics d understand and stand up for Navarro their personal rights. “The issue is when it comes to rights,” he said. “If you don’t know what your rights are, then you’re not informed. If you know your rights, then you can inform your family, friends and neighbors.” Valdez and Navarro said students need to visit communities after col lege graduation. “Don’t quit learning about your rights after you leave college,” Navarro said. “Have a commitment that you’ll go back into the community and find someone to take your place at the University. A lot of us forget after we leave, that the com munity needs help.” Valdez urged students to become involved politically in their commu nities both during and after college. “If our faculty won’t take leader ship roles, then it’s up to you as stu dents, so you can start working with a younger generation,” Valdez said. “As students, you have a lot to offer.” Valdez said having a college de gree does not always ensure equal treatment in society. A day before graduation, her 16-year-old daughter was told that she would not be able to receive her de gree because her English teacher did not believe teen age mothers “should be allowed to take up space in a classroom.” When Valdez con tacted the teacher, she was told there was nothing she could do that would enable her daugh ter to graduate. MAPA stepped in, and Valdez’s daughter graduated the next day. See Speakers, Page 12 New parking garage planned for ‘fish lot’ Valdez By Wesley Poston The Battalion Parking and facility offi cials plan to begin con struction on Parking Area 61, “fish lot,” next fall, so by late 1998 or early 1999, it will be covered with a park ing garage. Vergel Gay, an architect for the facilities planning di vision of the Texas A&M Sys tem, said the proposed $18 million garage should house about 2,400 spaces. However, Gay warns, the specific details "will change all over the place.” Tom Williams, director of Parking, Traffic and Transportation, said the original plans were to build a $12 million, 2,000- space garage on the 981- space lot. The plans were altered because it was more eco nomical to increase the number of spaces. The covered parking garage will include visitor areas and contract spaces, he said. “We plan to sell about 1,000 spaces as dorm park ing,” he said. The construction should coincide with the opening of the Reed Arena parking spaces. Parking spaces that will be lost during con struction will be reallocat ed to Reed and other park ing areas. Williams said the new site will be a popular addi tion to the shuttle bus routes. Students will be able to park in the garage and ride a bus to class on West or Main campus. Aggie Buck payment for hourly parking will be available, he said. Other options like debit cards may become available as the plans are finalized. The planning process began, he said, with stu dents’ requests to the Board of Regents for park ing that is accessible to West and Main Campus. “You can never have enough parking for the stu dents,” he said. See Garage, Page 12 rviq 'ack repair 1 stock repair repair is order /31/96 > Texas Ave. ’dn, Texas 75-3596 mmm IPIIr* ' MS 1 m m < ,, ^jgfl | | 'll | | m<. Y • . .1 i Model Student on 5tl\. g - Saturday a. - 6:00 pi an Morales to discuss affirmative action Dave House, The Battalion Tressa Orsak, a junior environmental design major, carefully places a building on a large-scale model of downtown Bryan. RESPECT aims to improve diversity Carla Renea Marsh The Battal ion nney General Dan Morales idress affirmative action as I speaker at the Aggie De- its’ meeting tonight, irales will answer any ions or concerns the au- e may have about affir- ! e action. Miller, vice president of Democrats and a junior ess management major, Morales will tell students e is doing on their behalf, stina Perez, president of Aggie Democrats and an edu cational psychology graduate student, said tonight’s dis cussion will be unlike other affir mative action debates. “We want to try to pre sent affirma tive action for what it is,” Perez said. “Students can decide for them selves rather than have an issue Morales shoved at them.” Perez said the major goal of the meeting is to educate and clarify misconceptions about affirmative action. Misty Hataway, programs director of Aggie Democrats and a junior political science major, said the Aggie Democ rats plan to have more Texas leaders speak at their meetings to promote their organization. “Wednesday night’s event will showcase the Aggie Democrats for everyone to see what we’re about,” said Hataway. She said the Aggie Democ rats are dedicated to educating college students and encourag ing them to vote. “With this year being an election year, it is important for college students to vote,” Hat away said. Perez said students need to familiarize themselves with the state officials in Bryan- College Station. “Even though several stu dents are registered to vote in their home town, it’s important for college students to know who represents them in the place where they live,” she said. By Ann Marie Hauser The Battalion The Division of Student Affairs has a vision of how to enhance the Texas A&M community for the 21st century. Achieving Community Through RE SPECT is a mission “to critically exam ine the Division’s programs and ser vices to see where we could begin to improve in areas of diversity.” Felicia Scott, assistant to the vice president for Student Affairs, chaired the two-year Division Di versity Task Force that developed the program to outline A&M’s oper ational philosophy. The program is called Reaffirming Equality through Sensitivity, Patience and Education, leading to Communication and ulti mately to Trust (RESPECT). Scott said RESPECT aims to make the Aggie experience positive for all students. “We are trying to be proactive in meeting the needs of all the students at Texas A&M through community de velopment,” Scott said. “[The vision] will have to come from the top down and then the bottom up.” The Task Force incorporated three groups — students, student organiza tions and staff and administrators. After discussing the positive and negative aspects of campus prac tices, recommendations were made and discussed with the Student Af fairs Council. Combined with input from the Division of Student Affairs, the de partments within Student Affairs discussed the controversial issues. Dr. J. Malon Southerland, vice president for Student Affairs, said creating a sense of community will impact the students. “[The action plan] is a recogni tion of the proper way to do busi ness in a university system,” Southerland said. The first phase of RESPECT is the knowledge and assessment phase which was implemented this semes ter with the Task Force on Racial Cli mate Assessment. Scott said the University hired an external agency to study A&M’s racial climate because we often can not see the negative things happen ing within the System. We are an institution of higher education, and people are from var ious backgrounds, Scott said. “We’re not a true community un til every member of the community “We are trying to be proactive in meeting the needs of all the students at Texas A&M through community development.” Felicia Scott Assistant to vice president, Student Affairs feels a part of the community,” Scott said. “Ultimately, by the year 2000, we will achieve a true community.” Phase two of RESPECT will be an action plan, and phase three will implement the vision. What happens in the second and third phases will depend on the as sessments from the first phase. Scott said the inherent mission for the University is to prepare stu dents for the world. She compared A&M to a cocoon for students. “It’s sad to grow just academical ly,” Scott said. “But socially, how have you grown?” Carl Baggett, student body presi dent and a senior accounting major, said RESPECT will take time to per meate throughout the organization. “It will take time and a lot of ef fort, but I think that it is very possi ble,” Baggett said. “A&M is a great place, but you can always improve.” 5 Street, 1 l, Texas e Battalion rODAY rish Faith vish student es his story of iiig new pride in eligion. Aggie!ife, Page 3 ®m * !Opener 20th-ranked A&M ! yball Team faces 5 Texas at home !htin Big 12 debut. Sports, Page 9 Sessifl e customers on per custom 3S 10-15-9^ m e For All tyear: Students Jd take advantage food and great ersation tonight. Opinion, Page 13 Right to carry firearms does not cross border Enrollment figures reveal trends Numbers show decrease in African-American, Hispanic students EL PASO, Texas (AP) — A warning to gun-toting Tex ans: Your right to carry does not extend past the border, and the conse quences for ignoring that fact can be severe. An East Texas couple re cently found out how much trouble it can be to take a firearm into Mexico, even unwittingly. Marguerite Braden and James Ronnie Mossburg were held in Reynosa, Mexico, for 1 1/2 days earlier this month after they told Mexican cus toms officials they were carry ing a .22-caliber rifle and am munition in their pickup. They’re now back in their home in Brookeland, 125 miles northeast of Houston, but they have yet to get their $50,000 truck out of a Mexi can impound lot. “We wanted to learn more about the country,” Braden said Tuesday. “We got an education.” Even though they didn’t remember the rifle was in the truck until they were asked about weapons, the couple broke a Mexican law prohibiting the importa tion of firearms or ammu nition without a permit. Such problems are actual ly common on the border, of ficials said, often because people either forget they have the weapons or the fact they’re entering another country or don’t realize that U.S. laws don’t apply there. Five people are currently in prison on gun charges in Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, and another is be ing held for taking ammu nition into Mexico. An American is also being held in Matamoros and another in Reynosa. “It’s a real heartbreaker to find people who have gotten themselves in this situa tion,’’said Larry Colbert, con sul general in Juarez. By I aura Oliveira The Battalion The numbers are in and the total Texas A&M main campus enrollment is 41,892 students, 102 more than last fall. Male Female Total 23 21 44 F&&hman :/ 4182 3830 8012 3402 3098 6500 juftior I 4613 4028 10641 Stesntof If 6080 4829 10909 Class 5 110 126 236 Professional 318 400 718 Graduate 4429 2409 6832 23157 18735 41892 But while overall enrollment has risen, the freshman enrollment among African-Americans and His panics is down more than 19 percent. Males still outnumber females with 55 percent, or 23,157 students. Females make up the re maining 45 percent, or 18,735 students. Donald Carter, Universi ty registrar, said the enroll ment ratio of men to women has “evened out” in recent years, but male en rollment is still consistent ly higher. Seniors make up the largest group of students, with 10,909, and sophomores, with an enrollment of 6,500, are the smallest group. The junior class has an enrollment of 8,641, and there are 8,012 freshmen. Of the total enrollment, 1,320 are African-Americans and 4,052 are Hispanics. Gary R. Engelgau, execu tive director of the Office of Admissions and Records, said that although they are not exact ly sure why, some say the drop in mi nority enrollment is connected to the Hopwood decision! Starting in Fall 1997, race and eth nicity will no longer play a role in the admission process. However, the fill- in-the-blank race/ethnicity box is still on admission applications for federal and state purposes. “It has not been taken off the ap plications, but at the same time, it is not being considered in the applica tion process,” he said. A feature that will be added to Fall 1997 applications is consideration of the family educational background of an applicant. Engelgau said that when the fami ly’s educational background is con sidered, applicant reviewers are given more insight into each individual’s personal circumstances. This allows A&M to diversify all aspects of its stu dent population. “Diversity is important in all its dimensions,” he said. “What we are going to do is make sure we have a good geographic distribution throughout Texas.”