TUESDAY February 9, 1999 Volume 105 • Issue 88 • 12 Pages College Station, Texas aggielife • Biological and sociolog ical theories give insight into the evolution and social history of the kiss. PAGES today’s issue Toons 2 Prof remembered 6 Wednesday’s issue Tobacco lawsuits bring about question of where responsibility ends and governing begins. sports • A&M swimmer Clara Ho makes a big splash in her first season by leading womens team. PAGE 7 pstinence rally stresses |rength through religion | BY LISA K. HILL The Battalion of premarital sex and forgive- ^■from God were the discussion jpics of an abstinence rally sponsored F^ggie Sisters for Christ. ^■st night’s rally held in the MSC penfed and closed with prayers, and speakers discussed abstinence ^■elated issues, focusing on the entkil and physical risks. ^■cah Wing, rally coordinator and ember of Aggie Sisters for Christ fropty, wanted to let attendees know ^fcave a choice when it comes to remarital sex. “We want to spread the word that bstinence is an option in relation 's, she said. “Abstinence is not an old-fashioned decision.” Barret Curnutte, Class of ‘97, spoke on how choosing to be a born-again virgin changed his life. “My views on sex took a 180 be cause I turned my life toward Christ,” he said. “I want to let students know that abstinence is a reasonable solution in the prevention of STDs and AIDS.” Curnutte said the turning point in his life was when he saw the inner peace of those waiting to have sex un til they were married. “I was missing that inner peace," he said, “and now that 1 have it. I’m hooked in spreading the word.” David Bereit, rally coordinating as sistant and a guest speaker, focused on sexual responsibility. see Rally on Page 2. Eric Newnam/Tiik Battalion tysician Noren Johnson speaks to the attendees of the abstinence rally Donsored by the Aggie Sisters for Christ Monday Night. Old Glory GUY ROGERS/The Battalion Ben Arcuni, (left) a freshman aerospace engineering ma jor, and Damon Donoho, a sophomore biomedical science major, retire the colors in front of the Academic Building. Eric Newnam/The BATTALION Susan Nennery (right), a Planned Parenthood representative, discusses re productive health care with Jennifer Murphy (left), a senior Chemical Engi neering major, during the mini health fair in the MSC Flagroom Monday. Mini health fair keeps students informed BY AMANDA PALM The Battalion Sexual Responsibility Week, sponsored by Student Health Ser vices Health Education and Aggie REACH began yesterday with a mini health fair in the MSC Fla groom. Health organizations from Bryan, College Station and Texas A&M were present to offer students free HIV testing and information about safe sex and sexually trans mitted diseases. Marcy McDonald, a wellness coor dinator with the Brazos County Health Department, said the fair was an ef fective method to reach a lot of people. “If we don’t provide the information, students will not get it,” McDonald said. Sara Mendez, a community out reach specialist with family health services, said fields including fam ily planning, pediatric care and HIV testing and AIDS services are of fered through family health ser vices. Erin Howard, an intern with the Brazos County Health Department, said students do not know enough about sexually transmitted dis eases. “College students are at a high risk for STDs,” she said. “They don’t know about the more com mon diseases like chlamydia.” Howard said statistics for Brazos Valley are hard to obtain because many students go back to their home counties to get tested for dis eases, but STDs and AIDS directly affect students at A&M. mages of Earth aid scientists’ research BY ANDREA BROCKMAN The Battalion A representative of the John- m [Space Center discussed ad- intages to hand-held cameras, ng- term missions and showed rages of Earth’s coastal changes om volcanoes, floods and hu- an modification yesterday at the iird annual Oceanography Semi- ir. Dr. Cynthia Evans said short- irn shuttle missions occur eight k> a year, last eight to 10 days and ipture 2,000-12,000 high-resolution rages. :;i|“We have collected a lot of ata,” she said. “We know the cy- es in which the forests burn and le plankton bloom.” Evans, who was in charge of the rogram for the two-year MIR aace station mission, said longer- term missions are advantageous. “From a space station platform, astronauts can observe events on a longer time scale,” Evans said. “We can determine the longevity of smoke and smog palls, dust storms and plankton blooms.” She said they are better able to track flood-water movement and detect changes to the Earth’s surface during and after volcanic eruptions. “We can also determine sea sonal changes and effects of longer-term events, such as El Nino,” Evans said. In a year, NASA will launch an other long-term mission on the In ternational Space Station. Evans said hand-held cameras provide a variety of angles for de tail and context. “Having a human behind the lens can capture events unmanned space craft can’t,” she said. She said astronauts are trained to decide which areas and phe nomena to photograph, and hand held photography complements aerial photography and imagery from unmanned satellite scanners. “Hand-held cameras can docu ment human-induced changes, weather cycles and particularly coastline evolution,” she said. Evans said all coastal systems are heavily modified by humans. “Since coastal systems are inte gral to transportation and industry, it is important to know how things are changing and prepare accord ingly,” Evans said. Evans displayed photos of the Yellow River Delta in China, the Nile Delta in Egypt and Atchafalaya Basin in Louisiana. “We have been able to inspect some pretty dramatic changes,” she said. Photo courtesy of NASA Hurricane Elena as it appeared in the Gulf of Mexico, Sept. 1,1985. Human-tended spacecraft have produced more than 350,000 im ages of Earth over the past 30 years, enabling scientists to ob serve geological, oceanographic, environmental and meteorological phenomena. Muster draws CEO as speaker BY BETH MILLER The Battalion Through evaluation of more than 100 nominees, members of the Stu dent Government Association Muster Committee selected Mike W. Baggett, Class of ’68, as Campus Muster Speaker for this year’s ceremony. Caroline Kohler, sub-chair for the speaker selection sub-committee and a junior environmental design major, said the sub-committee chose Baggett through a process of repeat ed researching and discussion with Muster committee members. She said the nominees are from a list col laborated over several years. She said there are no specific re quirements to be Campus Muster Speaker, but they are often former students. Baggett, CEO of Dallas law firm Winstead, Sechrest and Minick, served as vice president of Alpha Phi Omega and a head yell leader while he was an undergraduate student at Texas A&M. Since graduation, he has served as president of the Dallas A&M Club, president of the Aggie Bar Association and a trustee of the A&M Development Foundation. David Parker, a sub-committee member and a senior economics major, said Baggett was chosen be cause he fit the profile of who the sub-committee members thought would be a perfect Muster speaker. “He has just done everything you could possibly do at this University,” he said. “He was in the Corps and a yell leader. “We knew what a successful man he was. We knew he could address all age groups.” Ilexas senators play impeachment roles Jordanians bid farewell to Hussein, funeral brings together world leaders WASHINGTON (AP) — As President nton’s impeachment trial enters the final Preach, Texas’ two senators have maneu- ■jhd themselves into leadership roles on Ivopf the major issues of |e (jay: Censure and the jpblic’s right to know. I Sen. Kay Bailey lutchison is leading a bi- gartisan coalition seeking I) pry open the final de- Bber.itions and allow the ubllc to see how the 100 pa tors reach their ver- actjon the articles of im- Bthment charging Clinton with perjury mdlobstruction of justice. ■'.For his part, Sen. Phil Gramm is vowing ft block a move toward censure of the pres- ilent’s conduct, dismissing such a resolu- Bon as an unconstitutional “covering-your- Ipnny” strategy that could irrevocably iiufldle the separation of executive, legisla- Ivekand judicial powers. 1 ICensure establishes a new precedent |/hi( h will invite punishment through cen sure every time a Supreme Court justice’s ruling displeases one party or another, or an administration official offends Congress,” the Texas Republican said Monday, calling censure “dangerous.” Senators from both parties have been working on a censure statement that would be debated only after the Senate voted — as early as Thursday — to acquit or convict Clinton. Amid clear signs that the votes aren’t there to remove the president, cen sure has been increasingly discussed as an alternate option. In an appearance Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Gramm indicated that he would avail himself of every legislative op tion available to derail the censure move ment. “I am adamantly opposed to censure, and I intend to fight it hard,” he warned. Gramm or other opponents could force censure advocates to marshal 60 votes to bring the resolution up for consideration. The stance puts Gramm at odds with censure supporters who are demanding the opportunity to voice their disapproval of Clinton’s conduct in covering up his extra marital relationship with Monica Lewinsky. “We’re trying to make a historic state ment of record” on Clinton’s behavior. Sen ate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle said Monday, predicting that 20 Republicans would have to join Democrats in voting to clear the expected filibuster by Gramm or some other Republican. Gramm can’t claim his fellow Texas Re publican as an ally. Hutchison views censure as constitu tional and wants the opportunity to send the signal that “this is not appropriate behav ior, and the standard for perjury and ob struction of justice is not blurred.” In her own battle to waive Senate rules and allow the public to witness the final de liberations, Mrs. Hutchison can’t count Gramm among her supporters. “For 2,600 years, since the ancient law giver Solon in Athens and every day since in every courthouse in America, we have open trials, we have public evidence, we have public witnesses, but when the jury deliberates, it goes behind closed doors,” Gramm said Sunday. AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — To a welter of haunting images — a riderless white stal lion, a sea of sodden black flags, a pale queen in tears and a simple white burial shroud — Jordan’s beloved King Hussein was laid to rest Monday under a gray- veiled sky. Dignitaries and leaders from all over the world — some from states sworn to enmity — lionized the king, a testament to the enormous stature that belied Hus sein’s status as the monarch of a small and unassuming desert kingdom who preached peace in a turbulent region. The funeral produced some stunning scenes of reconciliation, including a hand shake between a radical Palestinian guer rilla leader and Israeli President Ezer Weizman. Nayef Hawatmeh’s guerrillas comman deered a school in Maalot in 1974, a hostage operation that killed 24 Israelis. Ordinary Jordanians viewed him more as a father than a monarch, and wept from the heart. The king was buried on a day domi nated by extraordinary images. The grief-stricken faithful pelted his coffin with flowers and police strained to hold back surging crowds seeking a final glimpse of Hussein. Echoing the poignancy of the proceed ings was the appearance of the king’s rid erless white stallion and Noor, the Amer ican-born queen, glimpsed briefly in the palace doorway as she watched her hus band’s casket borne off for a solemn pro cession through Amman, his capital. The five-hour funeral was also the oc casion for some delicate diplomatic pas de deux, drawing sworn enemies like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Syrian President Hafez Assad. The two stayed well apart, but even so, their presence at the same event was un precedented. Some of the hundreds of dignitaries at tending put aside pressing problems.