iSSS.-Sept.- — OMEN OF A&M ty celebrates 35th ry of womens 'e. AGGIELIFE, SUMMER TIME • Strickland comes back from injuries to start for Aggie volleyball team. SPORTS, PAGE 9 CHECK OUT THE BATTALION ON-LINE http://battalion, tamu.edu SAME ADDRESS, NEW LOOK m THURSDAY September 17, 1998 Issue 15 • 14 pages mqi nilli Newt Cing: lics case. The White ft >sibility Hiev; ept a penalt. Presidential Curry’ saidC e the tam 1 mm ll|l m Batiahon 105 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Wash inor,:' idates urged tend meeting thet will be a mandatory for the freshman class ■vas- md Student Senate can- onight. n;- eeting will focus on how a suc- cam- nd the Dived in "ling. Chase, ;ommis- id a se- ory and major, nickel s impor- e fresh- understand the dos and : running their election.” nt Body President Laurie M \\ Alt' || on hand to give the wel- SUPPLth speech, along with various -est speakers to inform po- *LD{ ii vt jandidates about the rules. _want them to know the 1! [ 999 demy honors er students 8 uf the. only only 5 Freshman class second-largest ever SH AT we also wan1: t hern to run J e campaign, and that if they 'R LESSER \ |y questions the election be here for them anytime,” -aid. I 0% 0 f' 3genda f° r the mee1: ' n S w' 11 —- election procedures, cam- 25% J 5gctc. where to place signs -3S and fines. paigning begins at noon and will end at midnight , 3. ions will be held Sept. 29- \l 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 10 lo- af rie/i across campus. e nesting will be in 292 MSC t. • Figures indicate A&M’s highest enrollment in the past eight years. BY AMANDA STIRPE The Battalion The second-largest freshman class in Texas A&M history registered for classes this fall with 7,363 students. Dr. J. Malon Southerland, Vice Presi dent of Student Affairs, said. The largest freshman class at A&M was the Fall 1987 freshmen, with 7,406 students. The exact enrollment figures will officially be released today, the four teenth class day, through a press re lease by University Relations, Mary Jo Powell, Associate Director of Univer sity Relations, said. The exact figures had not been re leased on the twelfth class day as ex pected due to the large class size. “There is an immense amount of data,” Powell said. “We are still in the process of analyzing the data before it gets to the public.” Last year’s freshman class was 6,233 students. The difference in class sizes was expected, but not in the magnitude seen this fall. “We were shooting for a large class, but the amount who chose to come was much higher than expect ed,” Powell said. Total enrollment this fall is around 43,406 students, compared to last year’s enrollment of 41,461 students not including Texas A&M at Galve ston. Texas A&M was sixth in total en rollment in the nation. The exact ranking will not be pub lished until all national schools re lease their fall enrollment figures. Fall 1998 enrollment figures for A&M are the largest in the past eight years. The overassignment situation this fall has not been as historically re membered as Fall 1995, known as the worst overassignment problem in re cent A&M history, with 600 students living in various study carrels and rooms throughout campus. “There are around 200 men and women overassigned right now,” Ron Sasse, Director of Residence Life, said. Financially, the large freshman class will not have an impact on funding un til Fall 1999. Mary Jo Powell said Texas A&M follows a funding formula. “The amount of money the state of Texas gives the schools are related to the amount of students we have this year,” Powell said. “We won’t get more money until next year. The anticipation of the large amount of freshmen this fall led to the availability of more money to accom modate the extra students. Blood banks suffer from low donations BY AARON MEIER The Battalion With the national blood supply at a critically low level, the American Red Cross is en couraging all eligible people to donate blood. Currently the local chapter of the Red Cross is having a blood drive on campus. Tina Sharp, communica tions manager for the Red Cross, said the A&M drive is not meeting its daily goal, and the drive’s overall goal of 1,250 units may not be reached. Jeff Nutter, a representative from the Red Cross, said A&M usually has a high donation rate, but this drive has not gone as expected. With two days remaining un til the blood drive ends, only 515 units have been collected. “We don’t know why dona tions have been decreasing,” Sharp said. “In the summer, we expect them to go down, and we anticipated that. We did hope they would pick back up this month, and they haven’t.” Nutter said two surgeries have been canceled in Wichi ta Falls, Texas, hospitals due to the shortage. Nelson Way, a representative of St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan, said the hospital has been made aware of the blood shortage. see Donors on Page 8. Slip sliding away 7 7 y.een former students will be 5 ~ J into the Texas A&M Petro- igineering Academy of Dis- ed Graduates tonight at the jstry banquet for their life- Tievement. 3s K.B. and Audrey Nelson ■ be recognized for their $10 gift to the petroleum engi- department. gift is the single largest gift t Dancencademic department in the f the University. Nelson’s gift will fund two 00 student scholarships and . million faculty chairs. ’gift also will allow the petro- ; igineering department to be , in honor of Harold Vance, only l> lf ’ 49 “"Tfuture Academy members nit 99ers nt t0 p ^ percent of living -- 1 " —les who have had their de- g>r 15 years or longer. ither blamed |*fdbike accidents weather and traffic conges- IJ chnli re l3 ' amecl f° r two accidents U billing CO ||j S j on 0 f bicyclists Pj t 's Wednesday. 1 IT ifl^ 1 minor accidents occurred in 1 ly afternoon and did not re- . ^serious injury. VIPW Imitations were issued in ei- cident. ^ first accident, at 12:42 'as at Olsen Road and West oreimpfiTive. 9S student on the bike was tak- le A.P Beutel Health Center, second accident, at 2:34 enothcL was on John Kimbrough , ard. jin Tortrec stuC j ent on t b e p^g haC j m j_ uises and did not require -''aI attention. I THE Wiatt - director of the Uni- I , Police Department, said wet “ rKllAijr anc j traffic congestion add REVltdent potential. yclists and cars have to be with one another. It could y.revieW f ‘ een more serious, but lucki- wny 1 so t, he said. MIKE FUENTES/The Battalion Michael Robertson, a freshman molecular and cell biology major, jumps through a mud puddle for beginning adventure dynamics, a kinesiology class. Hart Hall responds to heckling accusations • Hall president says allegations of harassment, attacks stand as misunderstandings. BY JOE SCHUMACHER The Battalion The president of Hart Hall took the opportunity at last night’s Residence Hall Associa tion to address accusations of heckling the Ross Volunteers progressing to last week’s Silver Taps ceremony. Ramsey Parr, president of Hart Hall and a junior psychol ogy major, responded to these accusations at the first Resi dence Hall Association general assembly of the year. During a time designated for feedback from the University’s residence halls, Parr said Hart Hall had been unfairly por trayed by an opionion column in Tuesday’s Battalion. Parr went on to quote sec tions from the column he felt were unfair. Parr said the alleged rude ness was a misunderstanding. Parr said a freshman was yelling at a junior resident of Hart Hall, not the Ross Volun teers. “The fish yelled, ‘Stay the hell away from my car,’ to a ju nior,” Parr said. “Hart Hall is deep in tradi tion, and would never do any thing like that,” Parr said to the assembly. Preceding Parr’s address to RHA, several guest speakers, in cluding Dr. J. Malon Souther land, Vice President for Student Affairs, and Patrick Williams from the Association of Former Students, spoke to the assembly. Other items on the agenda were an amendment to the RHA constitution. “Hart Hall is deep in tradition, and would never do anything like that/' — Ramsey Parr President of Hart Hall The amendment requires the depositing of funds to their Stu dent Organization Finance Cen ter account within 24 hours of obtaining the funds. The amendment was passed unanimously. In a light-hearted moment that concluded the evening, a bill titled BS98-03, sponsored by Heather Lindner and former RHA President Eric Williams, known as the Official RHA Handshake bill, was unani mously tabled. Magee sees doors opening for women in leadership BY MEGAN WRIGHT The Battalion Amy Magee, a senior psychol ogy major, is helping shape histo ry at Texas A&M. For the first time in the history of A&M, a female student body president is working directly with a female student speaker of the Senate. Magee, the speaker of the 51st Student Senate, began her in volvement in student politics as a freshman in high school. Since entering college, her ac tivities have included holding the position of chair of the MSC Ab bott Family Leadership Confer ence, COSGA, being a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, acting as a senator for the College of En gineering and being Student Sen ate Rules and Regulations chair. “It involved combining my ex perience and research I’ve done about women’s roles at A&M,” Magee said. “I worked at devel oping a productive vision, and it was difficult to communicate to the Senate at times. I try to bal ance a lot of variables at one time, and it is not always an easy job.” Magee feels gender plays no part in the duties of the speaker of the Senate, but that perhaps the ap proach differs. “As a speaker you keep order and make sure meetings flow smoothly. Keeping order may have different perceived ap proaches. If a man is assertive, it is just that — he is assertive. When a woman is assertive, there is a good chance that it will be tak en differently, and she will be seen as a dictator. I strive to bal ance my strong ideas and drive and try to set a tone that is very open,” Magee said. In her four years at A&M, Magee said she has found the roles of women on campus changing. “As a freshman, I didn’t see much participation from women in the upper levels of leadership. There was always a good number of women participating in ‘the oth er education,’ but in the past few years the leadership capacity of these women has really taken off. ” Magee is optimistic about the future of women on campus. “We’ve been getting this tremendous influx of dynamic women here at A&M,” Magee said. “It’s wonderful to see their oppor tunities increasing because A&M is growing to be more of an open campus in that respect. ” Seneca Falls anniversary honored with discussion BY BETH MILLER The Battalion 150 years ago it was a radical con vention held to promote women’s rights; today it will be the subject of a commemorative discussion about the historical event. The Women’s Studies Program and the Office of Gender Issues Education Ser vices will hold a discussion today at noon in 306 Academic Building in celebration of the Seneca Falls Convention. Nancy Tlibbs, a graduate assistant in the office of Gender Issues Education Services, said the Seneca Falls Conven tion, in July of 1848, was the first women’s rights convention. Two con cerns discussed were suffrage and property rights. The Declaration of Sentiments was written as the result of the convention. It was similar to the Declaration of Indepen dence but declared “all men and women” equal, rather than simply “all men.” Barbara Finlay, director of the Women’s Studies Program, said the cel ebration will include a reading of the De claration of Sentiments, followed by a discussion of the progress women have made in society. Finlay said she felt the event is impor tant to help people understand feminism and gain respect for the women of the past. “A lot of people are unaware of the feminism in the United States and the fact that it does go back a long way,” Finlay said. “These women were very courageous and are partially responsi ble for what we have today. It’s a part of history that rarely gets taught.” BRANDON BOLLOM/The Battalion Amy Magee, a senior psychology ma jor, is serving as speaker of the 51st Student Senate.