Weather Today ■ a^jj gm m M^^SjjK)rtrS ••• S66 3 1 11 * 1 U Opinion ... see Page S IGH W ifirJJIQH * HOW Tomorrow enleij 104™ YEAH • ISSUE 180 • 6 PAGES anton, appi;. said, "ft tired of •i tlie/re itional lovt e with iory Edwaril Assistant losing stati TEXfVS ff&M OnlVERSITY ■ vOLLEQE STrlTIQn, TEXfVS Tomorrow Opinion: Research, observation shows women have made a comeback in the ’90s in the workplace and on the home front. MONDAY • AUGUST 3 • 1998 Parties urge Clinton to reveal relationship with Lewinsky iscovered nditioner. i using o shuttle r cottage; shops, bus wasi* shuttle top n having’ to buildir. clearly ate d Karen H; lerofthei dental He; ation, wte te School, decision t he latestp ar 450 re-, lonth, DHt stitution'i d money o reports adents. eat surge Photo By Matthew Crawley/The Battalion July ’98 makes history with 28 100-degree days ■ Staff and Wire Report ■ If this summer's heat wave hasn't feotten you down, the following num- !bers about the current record-break ing hot spell will likely do the trick. ■According to figures from the rOflice of the State Climatologist at Texas A&M University, the three- ! month period of May-June-July Was the warmest ever in the Bra izes Valley, averaging 88.4 degrees, breaking the previous record of r 87 9 in 1996. July will go down as having the most-ever 100-degree days with 28, breaking the old record of 24 days set in 1980. On top of that, the year-to-date number of days of 100-degree heat has already set a record at 40, top ping the mark of 34 set in 1925. If those figures don't have you reaching for that glass of ice water yet, consider this: the consecutive number of 100-degree days in Col lege Station is now at 26, tying the record set in 1917. And if those numbers still don't have you in a sweat, remember this sweltering fact: August, historical ly the hottest month, still awaits. The current record of 100-de gree days is 58 set in 1917, and that record could easily be toppled, ac cording to graduate student Brian Belcher, who has compiled the fig ures for the state office. "What has been unusual about this summer is the hot weather so early," Belcher explains. see Meat on Page 2. WASHINGTON (AP) — A senior Republican urged President Clinton on Sunday to reveal his relationship with Monica Lewinsky, saying he thought Congress would forgive the president if his story turns out to be a matter of sexual misconduct. Key Democ rats agreed and said the sooner the better. "If he comes forth and tells it and does it in the right way and there aren't a lot of other factors to cause the Congress to say this man is unfit for the presidency and should be impeached, then I think the president would have a reasonable chance of getting through this," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. "1 don't know anybody at the top of the system who really wants to see the president hurt in this mat ter," said Hatch, who is chairman of the Senate Judi ciary Committee. A similar message was coming from Clinton's De mocratic allies in the wake of revelations last week that there may be physical evidence of a relationship be tween the president and Lewinsky, including a stained dress she has turned over to Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. As Clinton returned home from a weekend in New York, his senior advisers at the White House recog nized that the growing sentiment for some sort of con ciliatory statement, even among Starr supporters like Hatch, presented new opportunities. "We're cognizant of a number of outside voices, both Republican and Democrat, urging some sort of public statement," said one senior adviser, speaking only on condition of anonymity. The adviser said it was too early to assess what Clinton's next move might be. In Milwaukee at a meeting of the nation's gover nors, there was agreement that Americans, who have generally been critical of the uproar surrounding the Lewinsky affair, are starting to pay more attention. "It's a sideshow, but a serious sideshow," said Col orado Gov. Roy Romer, co-chairman of the Democrat ic National Committee. "There's a higher level of in terest than ever before." Clinton has denied, both in public statements and in testimony in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case against him, having had a sexual relationship with Lewinsky. He will be asked again on Aug. 17, when he must testify for Starr. Lewinsky, 25, also has denied having sex with the president, but last week received immunity from pros ecution and reportedly will acknowledge a sexual rela tionship when she appears before Starr's grand jury. Former White House senior adviser George Stephanopoulos said if Clinton had a sexual relation ship with the former White House intern, it's time to come clean. "Democrats believe the best thing for him to do right now is to go forward and tell the story," Stephanopoulos said. "I would make peace with my wife and I'd stand up and say, 'Here's the deal,"' Time magazine quoted Sen ate Judiciary Committee member Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., as saying. "Even though it might make Starr's case, no Congress would ever impeach him." Hatch, speaking on NBC's "Meet the Press," said that if the president had a sexual affair with Lewinsky, did not commit more serious crimes such as obstruction of justice or suborning perjury and tells the truth about it, "it could certainly re sult in a non-impeachment." see Clinton on Page 2. Photos by fake Schrickling Every weekend for four weeks, people go out to stomp grapes, taste the wines of the world and enjoy gourmet dinners at Messina Hof. Left: Terry Debo, a resident of Grapevine who was down for the Messina Hof harvest, enjoys his third harvest weekend. Above: Kriss Hall, a second-year veterinary student, and Paul Axtell, a fourth-year veterinary student, get their feet messy during grape stomping on Sunday.