" RNS, 20-16. Pg. 7 am a former student’ working in NYC. Like! I am in shocked distj horrible tragedy, e not been back to Ag. ost 15 years, but like; bond is just as strong: as when I last walked!) io when I heard the r; 0 f someone I knew, a ny family had died. »the world dy heartfelt condok ie victims and theirft also to the entire ie wake of the unforti : at the bonfire, houghts and prayers. am halfway aroundtliei my friends and fam i keeping me up to )ly saddened by the y young Aggies. I havei ace of my Aggie rii ribbon in remembri o It’s just a little soi nd me of the victims lies this week. Theywi) nind and in my heart. Stacey Manat vould just like toexi » sorrow at hearingtlts| e Bonfire accident, speak for all students gn land that have in saying thatattei mething that always you and I hope thatatl the Aggie spirit pn jch is the scale of the ;vent that here in Engli Matured as a story on news programs, numb at this event a o the families of all tlx d in any way bythishoni ilways felt Silver laps )f the greatest of Aggiel , and I am just sorry tin e unable to attend. 106 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY nday • November 29, 1999 College Station, Texas Volume 106 • Issue 63 • 10 Pages eginning the healing GUY ROGERS/Thi: Battalion Fans wear maroon to show support for football team, accident victims IP BEATO/Thf. Battalion CODY WAGES/The Battalion - Clockwise: (Above) Mourners gather at the site of the Bonfire collapse Thursday for the sunset gathering. (Top right) Redpots gather Exchange S& Vound Milton “Chip” Thiel, a senior agricultural economics major, who was released from St. Joseph Medical Center Wednesday. Lancaster Unlvet Bottom right): Mourners hold candles at the solemn yell practice held Thursday night at Kyle Field after the sunset vigil. Britain M BY BROOKE HODGES The Battalion When Alice Ann Freeman stepped onto Kyle Field for senior yell at Friday’s game against the University of Texas, she looked up into the stands and saw a sea of maroon and the spirit of Aggieland. Freeman, associate director of Ma roon Qut and a senior biomedical sci ence major, said the view of the stands was inspiring. “We went to the field and looked up,” she said. “It gave me chills. I was in awe. Our students, our families and friends, mixed in the maroon.” Freeman said both Texas A&M and UT were well-represented in the stands even though Maroon was the dominant color. “You could see the orange mixed in with the maroon and you could see how both schools came together,” she said. Kyle Valentine, director of Maroon Out and a senior finance major, said last Friday’s Maroon Out was more signifi cant than those in the past because of the recent loss of 12 Aggies. “It was so much more meaningful that everyone came and wore maroon and remembered the friends we lost [in the Bonfire collapse],” he said. Freeman said she knew Maroon Out would be overwhelming against UT be cause the school seemed even more united after the loss of their fellow classmates. “I had feelings it was going to be suc cessful,” she said. “Because of what hap pened there were people asking where they can get shirts.” Valentine said the T-shirts were de signed to show the fans support of the Twelfth Man. “Last summer when we were design ing the shirt, we put the 12 to signify the Twelfth Man,” he said. “We thought it would be neat to see the students and former students walking into Kyle Field.” see Maroon on Page 2. ie Battalion encourages lettesl etters must be 300 wordsffjj i the author's name, class 1 ler. I ie opinion editor reserves the) 'unset gathering draws thousands of mourners BY BRADY CREEL The Battalion .ast Thursday’s sunset at Texas A&M s for length, style, and accv® >e submitted in person at OliH Id with a valid student ID. lette® ailed to: The Battalion ■ Mail C*i 013 Reed McDonald i, . .., . Texas A&M Univers#! diversity was unlike any other. College station,rx S|rhursday would have been the night 77843-iui ■| 1 fj re burned, and although its flame campus Mali: mi was not present this year, the eternal E™iSifitSf ne 5 f ! he " s P irit * c ‘ 1n re'er be told" mined bright as thousands of Aggies onverged on the Polo Fields for a memo- ]al candlelight vigil. ■The crowd gathered at dusk and silent- y surrounded the site where stack stood ust a week before. Some came alone, tthers with their families, and many ^me in groups with friends, but they all 'file in remembrance of the 12 Aggies Page 8 •Let the ■countdown begin: 7, 6, 5 ... Students seek motivation at the end of the semester. Page 3 Opinion •Money for nothing Philbin shows he’s not game show material. Page 9 ticIQIO Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for information on the Bryan- College Station community. Mathematics Website to aid A&M students BY KENNETH MACDONALD The Battalion Dr. A1 Boggess, associate head of the Texas A&M Department of Math ematics, is expanding students’ op portunities to get help through the Internet with some of the hardest courses A&M offers. “The system is not yet up and running, but it should be ready by this summer,” he said. “The Web page will be the next level up from one-on-one help.” On the mathematics department’s Website, “e-math,” old exam ques tions will be answered step by step, he said. “Watching a professor do math in a lecture is only part of what stu dents need in order to learn,” Boggess said. “They must solve problems on their own. But when they get stuck, we have resources that can help.” He said the Web tutorials also would offer online chat rooms in BpjkpxQEER !H Ti II will offer new services! © ew website will provide old exams with Questions answered step by step hat rooms for students to discuss math problems Linbeck named chair of investigation RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion which students can discuss prob lems with each other. Boggess said business math cours es will be the first to utilize “e-math”. He said the program eventually will offer help in every required under graduate math course. Boggess said this type of tutorial suits the unique characteristics of math better than other disciplines. “Math involves more visual prob lem-solving, not just static textual problems like you would find in oth er types of courses,” he said see Mathematics on Page 2. BY STUART HUTSON The Battalion Texas A&M University Presi dent Dr. Ray M. Bowen an nounced Friday that Leo Linbeck Jr., CEO of Linbeck Construction Corporation, will serve as chair of a commission organized to de termine the cause of the Bonfire stack collapse. Bowen said Linbeck’s repu tation for integrity and open ness, along with his knowledge of construction, made Linbeck the best candidates to head the investigation. “While we continue to grieve for the students who were killed and injured in the Bonfire acci dent, and our hearts go out to their families, we must move forward in addressing these crit ical issues,” Bowen said. He said one of Linbeck’s first responsibilities will be to select other members of the commission which is expected to report its findings to Bowen by March 31. Linbeck said his appoint ment has given him with an enormous responsibility to dis cover the cause of the collapse. “I feel a tremendous sense of responsibility and obligation to find the truth associated with this occurrence,” he said. “This un dertaking dictates an open and “I feel a tremendous sense of responsibility and obligation to find the truth associated with this occurrence” — Leo Linbeck Jr. CEO, Linbeck Construction Corporation totally transparent procedure.” Bowen announced that the commission will be aided by a team of University staff mem bers, headed by John A. Weese, a professor of mechanical engi neering. Weese said his team will be responsible for helping the commission find advisers and to provide the commission with as much valuable information as possible. “Dr. Bowen chose Linbeck because he was not a graduate of A&M and would be as impar tial as possible,” he said. “In turn, Linbeck is expected to select members for the com mission that are also impartial, as well as expert engineers. What we hope to do is help them gather information from the A&M side of things, as well as anticipate any of the com mission’s needs from the Uni versity. ” Weese said the commission will pursue the investigation as thor oughly and openly as possible. “We will share information with as wide an audience as is consistent with the need for con fidentiality,” he said. “We must treat some information from cer tain sources with an extreme deal of care so as to protect the sources who were involved with Bonfire when it collapsed.”