)er 1,1997 Monday • September 1, 1997 Campus i pusReveille graves yield to renovations JL Rv Ipnam Korks Russell said the temnorarv site W. k'JMW JBPi... Editorial '• A ' HI s " By Jenara Kocks The Battalion Reveilles I through IV will not be ible to see the Aggies’ score at the first i&M home football game Sept. 6. Thegraves of Reveilles I through IV fere moved to Cain Park Aug. 13 to bake room for expansion of Kyle field. The expansion will begin after le Texas A&M-University of Texas jjotball game Nov. 28. "We were disappointed that they had to be moved, but we set our sights toward the new site.” JEFF KING COMMANDING OFFICER, COMPANY E-2 m Jeff King, commanding officer of mpany E-2 and a senior political ience major, said he and about 30 idets excavated the remains of the tid buried them at a temporary Cain Park. Curtis Russell, a landscape archi- lectfor Physical Plant, said a backhoe [operator from the Physical Plant as- ted in the digging up of the remains, _jtthe cadets did most of the digging. .1m He said the Reveille gravestones few milne/the BA™* t re in storage until last week, when ■ey were placed over the temporary lave site in Cain Park. Residence Life bans halogen lamps in A&M dorm rooms area engineer fot, leningtheroadby low and tedious . J workers are sched- existing pavement Texas A&M students are no longer mnitted to use lamps with halogen re cleared this criti-jbs j n residence halls beginning val of pavement),. s f a || t will move more officials in the Department of |C QQ , * ' Residence Life announced the ban he $4.8 million pro- ished in late spring s ' ummer - 1993 I Ron Sasse, director of Residence Life, said safety was the reason for the ban. ‘We consider the halogen lamps ssenous fire hazard and believe nei ther our students nor our facilities should be exposed to that risk,” Russell said the temporary site resembles the original grave in front of the north entrance of the stadium. The brick base under the grave stones is surrounded by con crete. Posts and a chain around the grave were installed when the con crete was laid. The bronze plaque explaining the tradition of Reveille will be placed at the site at the end of the week. King said that he did not object to the temporary site. He saici he and the cadets in E-2 were more concerned with the site after con struction is completed. “We were disappointed that they had to be moved,” King said. “But when we realized they had to be moved, we set our sights toward the new site. It’s something we’re going to be proud of.” King said the whole area in front of the north entrance of the expansion will be a plaza, and the Reveille grave stones will be the focus of the plaza. He said a scoreboard, visible from the grave site, will be placed outside the north stadium entrance. King said he hopes a statue of Reveille I will be placed inside the stadium. King said some former A&M stu dents complained about the reloca tion of the graves throughout the sum mer. However, he said their complaints subsided when they heard the reasons for the relocation. The Kyle Field expansion is a $30 million project that will add 10,000 seats to the stadium. It is scheduled to be completed in May 1999. Campus Briefs The Battalion Editorials appearing in The Battalion reflect the views of the editorials board members. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of other Battalion staff members, the Texas A&M student body, re gents, administration, faculty or staff. Columns, guest columns, cartoons and letters express the opinions of the authors. Contact the opinion editor for information on sub mitting guest columns. Editorials Board Helen Clancy Editor in Chief Mandy Cater Assistant Opinion Editor James Francis Opinion Editor Feuding over Reveille graves detracts from true tradition TIM MOOG/The Battalion Tradition is one of the founda tions upon which Texas A&M is built. For students, alumni and faculty alike, traditions are what set this uni versity apart from the rest. But, Aggie traditions have a propensity for in curring something other than spirit and pride, as the recent fiasco over the Reveille grave site has shown. Plans were announced this sum mer for the excavation of the graves of Reveilles I through IV to accom modate the expansion of Kyle Field scheduled to begin after the Texas football game this fall. Repercussions of this announce ment came with full force. Students and alumni whipped themselves into hysterical frenzy, claiming that this decision dashed the honor and spirit of Reveilles. The movement of the graves was considered by many interested parties to be a dishonor and a sign of deteriorating traditions at Texas A&M. The hubbub garnered the Uni versity a great deal of less than at tractive attention in both the media and private circles. This sort of in ternal feuding and boisterous op position between Aggies only re flects negatively on the University and the importance of Reveille. Let’s face it, there are already enough Aggie jokes out there. The very fact that the Reveille graves were given so much consider ation in the expansion plans should make it clear that the tradition is still dear to the University. Plans are al ready in the works for a permanent resting place for the Reveilles, a tree- lined plaza outside the north side of Kyle Field. In response to the criticism, Ag gies must remember that it is not the location of the Reveilles’ re mains that is important, but what her symbol represents. Spirit is a feeling, not a place. Sasse said in a press release. According to a press release from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, halogen bulbs can reach temperatures of 970 F to 1,200 F. The CPSC conducted tests during which 250-watt, 300-watt and 500-watt bulbs in torchiere-style lamps started fires in nearby com bustible materials. University officials said in a press release that although all halogen lamps are banned from the halls, torchiere-style lamps are the No. 1 target of the ban. In the press release, University of ficials suggest that students use a compact fluorescent light (CFL) fix ture, which is available in a torchiere- style lamp, as an alternative to the halogen torchiere. Jason Brooks, operations manag er of Texas A&M Bookstore in the MSC, said torchiere-style lamps us ing compact fluorescent lights are on order and should be available in the bookstore by the third or fourth week of September. 7 America Bank has wha students tec Center temporarily discontinues summer pass sales [ D »se Texas A&M students enrolled for 11997 but not the summer ses- n were not allowed to use the Student Recreation Center for two eeks this summer because of a lisagreement over the interpreta- ion of the “non-student" cap agree- fient made between the Rec Cen- erand local gyms. Dennis Corrington, director of lie Department of Recreational Sports, decided to discontinue the ale of continuing passes to stu- Student Government to test new election run-off process ritas sday V dents between semesters. In the past, the Department of Recreational Sports offered $70 sum mer passes to students enrolled in the upcoming fall term, but not the sum mer term, but gym owners in the Bryan-College Station area questioned the eligibility of these stu dents for the passes. The gym owners said people not en rolled in school during the semester in question should not be considered stu dents. Therefore, Texas A&M would be violating the “good neighbor” agree ment it made with the gyms when the Rec Center opened if the University al lowed students between semesters to buy continuing passes. The agreement capped the number of non-students who could buy passes to the Rec Cen ter at 1,150. Dr. J. Malon Southerland, vice pres ident of student affairs, later reversed Corrington’s decision due to student protest and a reevaluation of the cap agreement. (you want it? you grot it. ' The Texas A&M Student Govern- nentwill test a new election "ranking iystem” during fall freshman elec ts. The process will be included in lection revisions submitted to the Stu- ient Senate this fall. The ranking system would include un-off elections in the student body ieneral elections. the general elections, students tould choose a first-choice candidate, then rank the remaining candidates by preference. After votes have been tal lied, the candidate with the least num ber of first-choice votes would be dropped from the election. The students who voted for the dropped candidate would have their votes given to their second- choice candidates. Votes would be redistributed ac cording to rank until one candidate won the election. 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