. shhII swiliss Page member 1,19| gets deat ice reverse (AP) — The clock Kerry Max Cook's has stopped — -eady tried three 7 mutilation murde tary Linda Jo Ed«; /icted twice — hac mce from his third ednesday by the!; minal Appeals, osecutorial miscor; ; nearly 20 years est criminal court i fourth trial for Coo ig key testimony for er and inadmissible t voted 5-3 to reve iction. Two judges have barred a ret him set free. ie and you cheat ght and you havett convict someone, st the right to use loney to try the pen ie," said Paul Nugi ton-based attorney, se exposes what , that prosecutors break the law in try citizen," Nugentsai obs, chief felonypra Smith County disti office, said a mot ed asking the appe; insider its ruling. Highs & Lows day’s ExpectedHij 70°F night's Expected Id 38°F Tomorrow'^ Hxpected High 68°F rmncHTow MgM Expected Low 40° ON 5:00 P.M. reference works) .E -3:00 P.M. ersity otunda contact 50 ON Pasmussen, City Editor Sports Editor -ne, Visual Arts Editor ng.Web Editor g, Photo Editor aeber, Cartoon Editor ausenfluck, Christie Humplw® h Stewart, Courtney WalkerS ' Huff, John LeBas, Aaron Me |f Jeremy Furtick, Colby Gaines, 'id Boldt, Bryan Goodwin, Met d, Mason Jackson, Sean Me Angie Rodgers /latt Weber Redington & Ryan Rogere; rel Depot, Ed Goodwin, Dave V in the Division of Student PuR )onald Building. Newsroom ess: http://bat-web.tamu,ede The Battalion. For campus, It i-0569. Advertising offices are f : Fax: 845-2678. k up a single copy ofThe Battf fo charge by Visa, MasterCard,P s fall and spring semesters aR* nd exam periods) atTexasA^ 1 end address changes to The 43-1111. The Battalion Thursday Page 3 November 7, 1996 Thursday, Nov. 7 Jazztop, a rock band, is playing at the 3rd Floor Cantina. Sneaky Pete, a sing-along and novelty tunes act, is playing at the Cow Hop from 9:30 p.m.-l a.m. Peeping Tom, a rock cover band from Bryan-College Station, is playing at The Tap. The Fireants, a classic rock and rhythm & blues band, is playing at Fitzwilly’s. Ruthie Foster & Full Circle, a blues and folk band, is playing at Chelsea Street Pub & Grill. MSC Film Society is showing Trainspotting in the Rudder Theater Complex at 9:30 p.m. The Texas A&M Theater Department is presenting The Baltimore Waltz by Paula Vo gel, in the Fallout Theater in 144 Blocker at 8 p.m. Call 845.2621 for information. Friday, Nov. 8 The 3rd Floor Cantina is hosting the Texas A&M Honduran Association Party with Latin rock and merengue music. Open to the public Sister 7, a rock band from Austin, is playing at the Dixie Theatre. The India Association, Hindu Students Council and Hindu Society of the Bra zos Valley are hosting Dandiya, an evening of Indian music and dance, in the Student Recreation Center Archery Room at 8 p.m. The Texas Renaissance Festival is be ing held in Plantersville. Call 1.800.458.3435 for information. mm mu iOfii if lilt: [Kfllil I ml I mi:' if m:n: 3188!:; Ruthie Foster Festival Hill is hosting an August to April concert featuring the Fischer Duo at 3 p.m. in Round Top. Call 409.249.3129 for information. Sister 7 Just J, an acoustic act from Bryan-College Station, is playing at Copasetic Cafe. Sweet Eugene's House of Java is hosting Crystal Sea, a jazz band from Bryan-Col lege Station. Common Groove, a rock band from Bryan-College Station, is playing with opening band Jasmine Blue at the Cow Hop. Brian Whitaker, a classic-rock act from Bryan-College Station, is playing at Fitzwilly’s. Ruthie Foster & Full Circle, a blues and folk band, is playing at Chelsea Street Pub 6 Grill. MSC Film Society is showing The Nutty Professor in the Rudder Theater Complex at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. MSC Town Hall is presenting Coffeehouse poetry, music and comedy. The show is being held at Rudder Fountain at 8 p.m. The Texas A&M Theater Department will present The Baltimore Waltz by Paula Vo gel, in the Fallout Theater in 144 Blocker at 8 p.m. Call 845-2621 for information. The Texas Renaissance Festival is being held in Plantersville. Call 1-800-458-3435 for information. Saturday, Nov. 9 Darla Hood, a rock band, is playing with opening band, Ty and the Semiautomatics, at the 3rd Floor Cantina. Sister 7, a rock band from Austin, is playing at the Dixie Theatre. Bobby Hall and His Ice Cold Blues Band is playing at Fitzwilly’s. Ruthie Foster & Full Circle, a blues and folk band, is playing at Chelsea Street Pub & Grill. Forgotten Faith, a heavy-metal band from Bryan-College Station, is playing with opening band Ovid at the Cow Hop. The Texas A&M Theater Department is presenting The Baltimore Waltz by Paula Vogel, in the Fallout Theater in 144 Blocker at 8 p.m. Call 845.2621 for information. The Art of THE Sack p x ••-.yX JL small, \ / colorful, bean- ' ^ f < filled bag smacks the side of a shoe and flies into the air. The sack bounces across a knee, a heel and rests momentarily on a chest. The chest launches the bag toward the original foot and ... pop! Off the foot it goes again. “All right, we have a hack!” exclaims a pumped-up partici pant. This is the scene almost every afternoon at several spots on campus, including by the Rudder statue, in front of the Langford building \ and next to Francis Hall. It’s an intense round of “Hacky Sack,” a trademarked name for footbag, and a sport requiring more coordination and speed than strength and stamina, players say. The point of “hack” is to keep the bag in play, off the ground. Hackers use spontaneous combi nations of moves — kicking the bag with different parts of the foot and bouncing it off the chest, head and back — to keep it from falling. Hackers gather in circles of two to four players, striving for a “hack,” where everyone connects with the bag at least once. Non-hackers walk by the circles staring in wonder and disbelief, but Jamie Hansen, an avid hacker and a junior ocean engineering major, said the sport is not as hard as ^ ^^ it looks. “It’s easy to learn,” Hansen said. “You’d be surprised af ter a couple of weeks how fast your reflexes get.” Reflexes are one of the keys to keeping the foot- bag in the air, he said. Players must often extend their legs to the limits, jump and leap, and react without thinking to connect with the hack, be cause they are not allowed to use their hands. Unlike football, baseball or any number of com petitive sports, hack is entirely a team effort. When the bag hits the ground, it is imply time to start over. And there are only two “rules” in hack besides the no-catch rule: Never serve to oneself, and nev er apologize for making a mistake. “We all screw up sometimes,” Hansen said. Derek Demere, a senior environmental design major who hacks by the Langford Architecture Center, said he and his group of friends sometimes throw a new twist into hacking — deliberately not watching the bag as it is kicked around the circle. Demere calls this “zen” hacking, a form that relies on peripheral vision to keep track of the bag. How ever, zen hacking does not always work as well as he would like, he said. “It’s just something different to do sometimes,” Demere said. “Some people get annoyed because it doesn’t work as well.” But the main attraction of hack, he said, is just having a fun way to pass the time between classes. Tab Dougherty, a hacker and a senior com puter science major, said because hacking is mostly just for fun, participants talk, joke and laugh while playing. Dougherty said he wanted to meet more people to hack with, so he and Hansen started Aggiesack: The Texas A&M Footbag Club. He said the whole point of the club is to socialize, have fun, and, of course, hack. “It’s kind of a social club,” Dougherty said. “We don’t do much except kick the hack around.” Dougherty said he wanted to attract players more experienced than himself to the club to help members learn new tricks and moves. None of the Aggiesack members get too tricky, he said, but among the moves they do try are: • “Stalls”: catching the hack on a foot, the toes, the chest or back, and head. After catching the bag, the player attempts to fling it from the resting spot to an other circle member. • “Jester”: jumping straight up and snapping one leg back to kick the bag. • Catching the bag behind the knee: af ter the catch, the hacker tries to pop his leg straight out, to make the hack fly upward instead of drop to the ground. At least one Aggiesack member can pull off the last trick: Tarlac Williams, a founding Aggie sack member, club treasurer and a junior interna tional studies major. Williams said he began hack ing only about six months ago. He said the fun of hack is that it is laid-back and intense at the same time. “The longer it keeps going, the more tense it gets,” Williams said. “The pressure builds. But at the same time, the pressure never really gets that bad.” Dougherty said the pressure is low because none of the club members are too talented for less experienced hackers. Any- one who wants to Top: A group of stu dents gather to hack between class es in front of Lang ford Architec ture Building. hack is welcome to join the group Mon days and Wednesdays at 4 p.m. near the Rudder statue, he said. Most people can pick up the sport pretty easily especially skateboarders, soccer players and those who |f are good at video games. ^ “It’s more of a coordi nation sport than anything else,” Dougherty said. “You don’t need that much en durance and strength.” Women are especially en couraged to give hack a try •41^ because hack is not just for guys, he said. Those who just do not feel like hacking should not be afraid of approaching the group or throwing a stray hack back into the circle. “We always invite people to hack with us,” he said. “It’s a real good way to get rid of stress and so cialize. Once you’re done, you feel nice and relieved.” Center: Tab Dougherty, a senior computer science major, jumps to kick a hackysack. Above: Derek De mere, a senior envi ronmental design major, hacks to pass the time between classes.