The Battalion |1K: Volume 103 • Issue 127 • 8 Pages The Batt Online: http:// bat-web.tamu.edu Friday, April 11, 1997 Drum majors ready Annual unity test for new challenges P romotes diversity Three students chosen to lead f 97-'9S hand Dave House, The Battalion lohn Fugitt, a junior history major, was chosen as head prum major. By Joey Jeanette Schlueter The Battalion The Texas Aggie Band drum majors for the 1997-1998 school year were named Wednesday night after a competitive showing on the Band Drill Field. John Fugitt, a junior history major, was chosen as head drum major. Chris Sullivan, a junior ac counting major, will be infantry band side drum major, while John Fluff, a junior industrial distribu tion major, will be artillery band side drum major. Fugitt said being drum major will be the greatest challenge of his life. “It is an extreme privilege and they (Sullivan and Fluff) are some of my best friends in the band, so it is going to be great working with them,” Fugitt said. Fugitt, a trumpet player, was the second candidate to try out Wednesday, and said he was ner vous as he entered the competition. “When I heard the band play, all my fears went away,” he said. “I knew this is what I wanted to do.” Drum major responsibilities include teaching the band drills and leading the band on Kyle Field at football games and other events. Fugitt said support from the band helped him reach his goal. “Every band member has done something to help me and make me a better person,” he said. “My goal is to give something back to them, give them a band they can believe in.” See Band, Page 2 ► Whoopstock will feature performances, sports activities, face-painting, and chalk drawings. By Marissa Alanis The Battalion When the Ku Klux fQan held a rally in the Bryan-College Station area in 1993, the response from Texas A&M students, campus organizations and faculty mem bers was to band together and help pro duce a unity festival called Whoopstock on the Polo Fields. The event, which has become an an nual celebration with the purpose of uni fying a diverse coftimunity, will kick off once again Saturday from noon to 6 p.m. on O. R. Simpson Drill Field. Karen Collymore, chair of the Whoop stock committee and a junior psycholo gy major, said the festival’s theme of “Peace, Love and Gig 'em” illustrates the idea diversity education is a fun thing. “It (diversity) doesn’t have to be a se rious classroom experience,” Collymore said. “It can be a festival." Diversity will be manifested through such performances as the Aggie Wran glers, Ballet Fdlklorico, the Kappa Alpha Psi step show and Bobby Hall’s Ice Cold Blues Band. New additions to the entertainment lineup include Bryan rap artist C-Ride and Krump, a professional comedian from Louisiana. Karri Wilson, director of fund-raising for Whoopstock and a senior zoology major, said any event that includes a variety of per formers will offer something for everybody. “It’s like a little slice of America right on Simpson Drill Field,” Wilson said. The upcoming festival has expanded this year to involve children of the Bryan- College Station community. Children can participate in a storytime set aside for them and a fun run at the event site, with the money raised to benefit Sheltering Arms, a charity in Brazos County. Ron Going, director of publicity and a se nior philosophy major, said one reason the Whoopstock committee chose to involve more of the community is difficulty in talk ing about unity in a limited perspective. “It’s kind of hard to talk about ‘Well, we should be united on campus but ignore the community,”’ Going said. “I think that attitude is sometimes far too prevalent.” See Festival, Page 2 Sf Freshmen gear up for Beach Ball The event is open to all students Fish Beach Ball By Wesley Poston The Battalion Sun, surf and fish will adorn the Fish Beach Ball tonight at the Student Recreation Center, sponsored by the Class of’00. • Canceled last weekend because of weather, the Fish Ball has been 1 u*rescheduled for tonight from 8 until imidnight. Unlike past Fish Balls, the dance will be open to all students. Kyle Valentine, Class of ’00 vice president elect and a freshman bio medical science major, said the class :ouncil decided to hold the ball at :he Student Recreation Center to bol ster attendance. “We thought this would be a good ime of the year to do that,” he said. Previous Fish Balls have been held at he Memorial Student Center. Gregg Nichols, a sophomore agri- :ultural business major, served as Class rf’99 vice president during last year’s ?ish Ball. The class of '99 Fish Ball was a semi- at: formal dance attended by about 100 students and their dates. “We had fish everywhere and 99’s hanging from the ceiling,” Nichols said. Kendall Kelly, a sophomore psy chology and Spanish major, was Class of ’99 secretary last year. Kelly said al though the council advertised the event, not as many students attended as they had planned. “I think that a lot of people didn’t know about it,” she said. Nichols said although the dance did not draw a large crowd, the class did profit from the dance. “I know in the past they didn’t make money,” he said. “We actually made a little bit.” Kelly said the efforts of the Class of ’00 to advertise the Beach Ball have been commendable. “They’ve really done a great job with advertising,” she said. “It almost re minds me of campaigning.” Valentine said the freshman council has been “causing a ruckus around campus” this week to inform students WHERE: Pavilion Area of the Rec Center EVENTS: Volleyball, basket ball, swimming, dancing. Singled Out, door prizes and refreshments Tickets are $5 at the door of the reschedule. “We’re trying to let everyone know it is this weekend and not last weekend,” he said. fylike Lemonds, Class of ’00 president and a freshman political science major, said the event will be held rain or shine. “We feel this is a tradition and that we have an obligation to freshmen and the student body to keep that tradition alive,” he said. He said if the weather is bad, the event will be held in the archery room of Student Recreation Center. eo k Senate approves bill seeking diverse college admissions AUSTIN (AP) *— Race-neutral factors such as economic status and family back ground would be emphasized in college admissions under a bill approved by the Texas Senate on Thursday. The bill by Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, attempts to address a court ruling that has resulted in the elimination of race as a consideration in admissions and finan cial aid policies in Texas. The ruling in the Hopwood case has be come a lightning rod of controversy after Texas Attorney General Dan Morales inter preted the ruling to apply to all schools. Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education Norma Cantu has said the ruling should ap ply only to the University of Texas law school, which was successfully sued by four white students who argued the school’s ad missions policy unfairly favored minorities. Several lawmakers pointed to declin ing minority enrollments at Texas col leges in the wake of Hopwood while argu ing in favor of West’s bill. “It wasn’t that many years ago that our country kept people in bondage,” said Sen. Gonzalo Barrientbs, D-Austin. “This legislation is not about trying to give one person an advantage over another. This legislation is essentially going to provide people who haven’t had all the breaks in life a chance to go to college.” The bill was approved by the Senate 23- 7 and sent to the House for consideration. The bill says that 50 percent of a college’s enrolling class should be admitted based on traditional criteria, such as grade-point averages and standardized test scores. Forty percent should have their acad emic record considered along with fac tors such as family background, socioe conomic status or whether a student is bilingual, according to the bill. The remaining 10 percent of the en rolling class would be made up of stu dents whose academic record may be borderline, but who show potential to succeed during personal interviews. :■ -A m. iff! * * Work of Art Derek Demere, The Battalion Bao Hunh, a senior environmental design major, works in the woodshop in the Architecture Building. The woodshop is open to all students who pass the shop safety class. The Battalion INSIDETODAY OPERA: OPAS pre sents La Boheme, a tale of the struggles of youth in France in the 19 th century. Aggielife, Page 3 I#' Weather Page 2 Sports Page 6 Opinion Page 7 First lady compares Whitewater probe with UFO fixation She rejected suggestions that the White House hoped to discourage Webb Hubbell from talking to investigators. WASHINGTON (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton denied Thursday that administration officials tried to silence a key Whitewater figure and said the long investigation re minds her of “some people’s ob session with UFOs and the Hale- Bopp comet.” President Clinton threw back his head and laughed when he heard about his wife’s cosmic compari son. “Did she say that?” he asked. “That’s pretty good.” Publicly addressing the ques tion of hush money for the first time, Mrs. Clinton rejected sug gestions that White House officials hoped to discourage Webb Hubbell from talking to Whitewa ter investigators by helping him find work after he resigned from the Justice Department under an ethical cloud in 1994. “There isn’t anything to be hushed up,” she said on WAMU’s “Diane Rehm Show.” Mrs. Clinton, who was a law part ner of Hubbell’s in Arkansas, said he was “somebody who people wanted to help to get through what they thought was a rough patch in his life.” Hubbell has acknowledged lying to President Clinton and telling him that there was no basis for charges against him. He later pleaded guilty to bilking his former law firm and its clients of hun dreds of thou sands of dollars and agreed to as sist Whitewater Clinton prosecutors. In recent interviews, Hubbell has said he is sorry for deceiving the Clintons, his longtime friends. “I accept his apology,” Clinton said Thursday during a Cabinet Room photo session. “I’m not angry at him anymore because he paid a very high price for the mistake he made.” Frustrated by Hubbell’s memory lapses in the probe of the Clintons’ finances, prosecutors are investi gating whether the financial assis tance he got after resigning was de signed to improperly influence his cooperation. “There’s no evidence of that,” Mrs. Clinton said. “There will not be any evidence of that.” The pres ident last week said there was nothing improper in the effort to steer work to Hubbell, character izing it as an act of compassion. The first lady went on to dismiss the notion of hush money as “part of the continuing saga of Whitewa ter, you know, the never-ending fic tional conspiracy that, honest to goodness, reminds me of some people’s obsession with UFOs and the Hale-Bopp comet some days.” Asked if she had any concern about being indicted, she said, “None whatsoever.” In her radio interview and a subse quent TV appearance on CNN, Mrs. Clinton also addressed questions about Democratic fund-raising abus es in last year’s presidential campaign. “Mistakes were made,” she told one radio caller who said his faith in the administration had been shak en. “But I hope that you will follow this entire matter before you reach any conclusions.”