:tober 9, Thursday • October 9, 1997 S The Battalion PORTS Dicky V. invades Aggieland, baby Bogey With Barone weekend gives University, basketball program national spotlight Return to sender d about 76 lildren, to Id War II; id ay, victimsi ling demons| i former tr; rother atai mrb of Merit: rined withjei ind agesofsa hildren allej They also m se Stopnicki. police rout: tges2and5. t mares foti 11 b e going; same airasf nior Cindy Lothspeich and freshman Celia Howes block an at- dicated as| spike in A&M’s win over UH. See complete story, Page 14. 1, with 57 pe!| •essinglittlet said. al was more; judging “the he deporta: RONY ANGKRIWAN/The Battalion By Chris Ferrell Sports editor ESPN college basketball analyst Dick Vitale will be the guest speaker at G. Rollie White Coliseum Friday night to help kick off the 1997 Texas A&M Basketball Team’s season as part of this weekend’s “Bogey With Barone” festivities. Vitale’s speech will be the highlight of an entire day of activities. “We think its an honor to have Dick Vitale here first of all,” coach Tony Barone said. “He’s recognized as the premiere basketball analyst in the country. I think any time you can expose your fans and your support ers to a guy like this, its nothing but a plus for our basketball program and Texas A&M in general.” The event will begin at 6:30 p.m. outside of the Coliseum, with free food provided by On The Border. There will also be games and a Dick Vitale sound alike contest. “It’s something that we’re hoping the students are going to get behind 150 percent,” Barone said. “It’s a simple night. You come over, you do On The Border, you get yourself some free food, get some soda, you go in and hear Dick Vitale speak and when that’s over, you walk over and get ready for yell practice. The next day we play Iowa State in foot ball, it’s a great, great weekend.” Vitale will arrive at G. Rollie White at approximately 7:15 to take part in the party, at 8:30, the program will be moved inside for Vitale’s speech. Barone said the night will be a great chance for A&M to gain nation al exposure. “This is a guy who has a major af fect (on college basketball). It gives us an opportunity to show that there is a spirit here at Texas A&M that is second to none,” he said. “A lot of times you hear about the spirit at Texas A&M, but if you’ve never been here, or you’ve never really seen it, you don’t know what it is. So I think the students have an opportunity here to promote Texas A&M’s spirit, not just part of athletics, but as part of the university. Dick Vi tale will talk about this trip all year long and he will be an ambassador for Texas A&M based on what he sees at this particular event.” Friday night’s event will mark the conclusion of an entire day of activities. The day will begin with a golf tour nament at Pebble Creek Countiy Club and will also include a dinner at G. Rol lie White. Barone said that there are Vitale currently about 220 people signed up to play golf and 550 planning to attend the dinner. Barone said the day will help shine the national spotlight on a basketball program which is about to take off. “We have spent six years trying to get this thing organized so that once we were moving forward, there weren’t go ing to be anymore road blocks, so I hope that’s where we’re at right now,” Barone said. “We have guys who have worked harder in the preseason than I’ve ever had. I think they recognized what they had to do and did it. “We're going to be on ESPN. We want Dick Vitale to come back for the Texas game and this is a way to do it. There’s something to be said about guys who stay and fight. There’s something to be said about guys who don’t run. Eventu ally your going to look back and see how important you are to the program. We’ve got a bunch of guys like that right now.” \Tongan Terror’-izes Texas A&M opponents By Jamie Burch Staff writer our-hundred miles south- |1^|rki||fi east of Fiji in the south Pa- LL X1UII. cific lies a small island chain ■own as Tonga — where rugby is 1 |ig. But in The States, football is :h< sport of choice. The battle on k gridiron is the focus in the QMiVorld o’ sport from Friday Night U Idlllghts to the institution known as Monday Night Football. Texas offensive lineman Seimisi JXlu heimuli, of Tongan descent, is well aware of this fact. jgoslavia(Af|;|Heimuli, a native of California, residentialtsaid he grew up around rugby, but to clear wiHgan playing the pigskin classic rfficials Wed®cause of its popularity. )ther vote. 'I “i watched my dad, when I was ationalist playing rugby,” Heimuli said. >dan Milose «j ts 1T | a i n Tongan sport. All the candidate ir jdilgwQgdgj go to our own field and l tuI T7 £ start imitating the men. Rugby is be held, fine Wednesday. hoseparami support of tel 1 Bosnia,won! es Sunday. Zo igoslav presii 1 percent. Thi ; must be : ths because e electorate! mrt of the it 50 percenti suits count, s election,™ een the two; first round of un will be ope: swell. If the lore than 50: unoffwillbek najor defeat :’s Socialist; first multi-p ore than and all sut ions, s a national re than that vie when the d in 1991. Set inationalistf- o cates a gift Id incorpo' id Bosnia, tions Sunda) Montenegit ; that make; /lilosevic’s larrowly deft dtallenger rding to at not as big in the U.S. as back in the (Tongan) islands, New Zealand, or Australia. So, I started playing con tact football in the ninth grade.” Heimuli grew up in California and moved to Euless, Texas after his freshman year in high school. The 6-foot 3-inch, 300 lbs. line man only visited the Tongan is lands as an infant. He knows about his heritage because of his parents, but has never lived in the south Pacific. Heimuli said he came to A&M in 1995 because of his pleasant re cruiting experience. “I wanted to go somewhere back in California like Berkeley, UCLA, or USC,” Heimuli said. “(Defensive line) Coach Johnson was the best of the guys recruiting me. He was straightforward. All those other guys told a lot of lies. “He talked about A&M and no one else. Other coaches would put down A&M and other programs. They’d say Took at A&M. They’re on probation. They’re a bunch of cheaters.’ Coach Johnson never did that. He just talked about what it was like to play for A&M. I re spect him for that.” The Tongan has never looked back since. After his redshirt sea son, Heimuli got his chance to prove his worth as a player. Heimuli was battling then junior center Koby Hackradt for a starting position on the offensive line. Pri or to the season opener at BYU, Hackradt went down with an in jury. Guard Calvin Collins was shifted to center and Heimuli was penciled in at right guard. Heimuli said the emotions were running high minutes to the start of the game in Provo, Utah. “The team always walks out on the field, before the game, to check out the stadium,” Heimuli said. “Afterwards everyone just went to the locker room, but Cameron Spikes and I just sat in the stands. Fans were coming to the game and we were still sitting there. “People kept asking us what we were doing. It was incredible. We were about to start our first college game ever.” But once the game got under way, Heimuli said his nerves set tled down. “Once we started it was noth ing, because the guys I went against in practice were better than those I was going against in the game. Brandon Mitchell, Pat Williams and Troup (Eddie Jasper) were all ten times better.” Heimuli went on to start all 12 games, helping the offense post an average of 404.5 yards per game, including 230.3 yards via the run. But Heimuli was not sure he would start for the remainder of the season. “I had the start for that game,” Heimuli said. “It doesn’t mean I’m gonna have it for the next. When Koby came back it put a lot of pres sure on me. He hurt his knee but came back as if it never happened. It made me nervous. “The old offensive line coach, Mike Sherman, said ‘Koby’s coming back. He’s looking good. You need to pick up your performance.’” During his red shirt season against the University of Texas at Kyle Field. The Aggies were stunned by a 16-6 loss. Following the game, Longhorn players and fans stormed the field. Heimuli tried to his part to control the chaos. “Some Texas football players were jumping on a corps mem ber,” Heimuli said. “I was being stupid, I wasn’t thinking. I grabbed one of the players and hit him. Please see Heimuli on Page 13 t rn^mrm DAVE HOUSE/The Battalion Seimesi Heimuli led A&M with a 425-pound bench press. 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