Monday,) ?r arti 'U frtfti a ghsdai SVIliE, In; hoal kiKrltovffi? inv dotihighisp; ’ i disbelitf askJf' np ol an i Hen'sj ■ hundred vards! ' o hit my twist' . I'H'inimg reat] ' ^ith his wfti ' southwest cflj t> > earlier, Shd; I members »h I ' '--iitle ranch *crn Arm\ hatuiumc ort I luni land,' m I iuwiuerKi icir property, ired like a exploded,” Atl idn’t knowtii,' nomine wha* TUESDAY February 1,2000 Volume 106 Issue 81 12 pages * iiiei iu *- African-Americans leave mark on campus BY JULIE ZUCKER The Battalion Part 1 of 4 Eighty seven years after Texas A&M College opened its doors in 1876, the first African-American set foot on campus as an enrolled student. Leroy Sterling, from Bryan, enrolled as an under graduate along with 2,535 other students for the first yr. 't length of iti te cracked, slccd mthcae* summer session at A&M in 1%3. Six other African-American students, two fe males and four males, joined Sterling for Summer Session H. Four years later, in 1967, Clarence Dixon Jr., was the first African-American student to graduate from Texas A&M. By 1969, 15 African-American students were en rolled at Texas A&M. Known only as the A fro-American Society, the 15 students, led by senior Kenneth Lewallen went to President James Earl Rudder with the following eight demands of the University: •Recognize the Afro-American Society as an on- campus organization •Hire a black counselor, approved by black students •Hold an investigation on recruitment policies for sports, also investigate Athletic Director and Head Coach, Gene Stallings (whom the group wanted fired) •I lave immediate recruitment of black students in all major sports 1878 foxAu A&M CoHvhv 1963 Finn Afrksn-AtJWfU an Studral enrolled at A&M 1969 Afro American SkKloiy has j demand* for the univor%l4y J 1971 J (Craikiaitnl in '7M Finn Akk an j American to man on km4t*ali team 69 Kwanaaa fn$tivitie* ailov/vii on < amoo* 1967] 1969] M African fall Svmv*tvr : 50 Alrkan •Host a black high school student recruitment program •More black literature available in classes, in bookstores and newsstands •Have a black student on the A&M civilian stu dent council •1 lave a truer representation of the role and scope of the black man in the compulsory American Histo ry courses on campus I lowever, their demands were not met. In University documents. Rudder said the “stu dents went about it the wrong way.” Rudder said students have the right to pe tition, but organizations that use force and threats could face suspension from school for no less than one semester. In the same documents, tlie Afro-American 2000 1 GUY ROGERS & JEFF SMITH/Thk BaTTAIJON See Students on Page 2. is unreal, liken •hoafs tcc of Wafas uch continual x'k pictures f landelierutki ed sections:*: helling hapye: . xercise imdrc attalions, t ummmgusi I nod. c really coks that is uh\ irine until we a she said, lings said dm on « hat ttc? i ollicials are:* ! \\ en* expect the familyoe nts some ass x'ii .main. i of >ntt Alaska Airline crashes 88 die off coast of southern California ■ OXNARD. Calif. (AP) — An Alaska Airlines jet carry ing 88 people plummeted into the Pacif ic! )cean on Monday after its pilot reported mechanical problems and was diverted to Los Angeles for an emergency landing. Sever- afibodies were recovered from the chilly water, but there was i no sign of survivors hours after il the crash. ■ Flight 261, heading from j: Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to San \ Francisco and later to Seattle, j went down at 4:36 p.m. PST, ! the airline said. ■A large field of debris rolled | in big swells about eight miles j offshore as aircraft and small j boats converged on the site just | before sunset. Hours later, the I high-power lights of commer- jj cial squid boats illuminated the |ij darkness as a cutter and small h. boSts continued the search, ipfxeveral bodies were found. Coast Guard Lt. Chuck Diorio said, hut he could not give a spe cific number. ■“Every resource is out there to find people,” Coast Guard Capt. George Wright, said. "We’re ac tively searching for survivors. ... In 58-degree water temperature, people can survive. We’re not go ing to quit until we’re positive there’s absolutely no chance.” Alaska Airlines spokesperson Jack Evans said the plane was car- rying 83 passengers and five crew members. The airline said the pilot re ported having problems with the “stabilizer trim” and asked to be CALIFORNIA Anacapa Is. Oelall Jrr Los Angeles PH Inti, irport Site of Alaska Airlines crash Pacific Ocean diverted shortly before the plane crashed. “Radar indicates it fell from 17,000 feet and then was lost from radar,” San Francisco airport spokesperson Ron Wilson told KRON-TV. A source with close knowledge of the investigation, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the flight was normal and stable until the crew reported control prob lems. Radar showed the plane plunging toward the ocean short ly afterward. Evans said the plane had no pre vious stabilizer problems, and FA A spokesperson John Clabes said it had never been in an accident. Evans also said the plane was ser viced on Sunday, went through a low-level maintenance check on Jan. 11 and had a more thorough routine check last January. It was un clear what Sunday’s service en tailed. Alaska Airlines, which has a distinctive image of an Eskimo painted on the tails of its planes, has an excellent safety record. Il serves more than 40 cities in Alas ka, Canada, Mexico and five Western states. The National Transportation Safety Board was assembling a team of investigators in Washing ton, D.C., and planned to send them to the crash site, spokesper son Pal Cariseo said. Gov. Gray Davis said he had ordered the Cal ifornia National Guard to offer whatever help is needed. The weather was clear at the crash site, where the water is be tween 300 and 750 feet deep. Coast Guard Cmdr. Jim McPher son, said. The most recent fatal crash in the United States involving an MD-80 series jet was last summer’s Ameri- “Welcome back . . Lyle Lovett (L) and Robert Earl Keen (R) held a press conference at Texas A&M University Monday to pro mote the Bonfire Benefit Concert scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 6, at Reed Arena. All proceeds will go to ward the Bonfire Relief Fund which directly benefits victims of the 1999 Aggie Bonfire collapse. it equips ent doe able M jachingf Redpots to demonstrate bonfire building process BY ROLANDO GARCIA The Battalion The redpots in charge of building the 1999 Aggie Bonfire will meet with investigators this week to demonstrate how the thousands of logs used in the stack were cut, assembled, and wired together. The consultants hired by the Special Commission on the 1999 Aggie Bon fire want to observe the human and be- havioral sides of the building process, commission chair man Leo Linbeck Jr. told The Dallas Morning News Sunday. “How was it organized, how was it supervised, how they divided into teams - all the nonstructural elements,” Linbeck said. “Did the people construct it in the way it was intended?” Linbeck could not be reached for further comment Monday but released a statement about the up coming demonstration. “This is just another piece of the research effort undertaken by the consultants. It is not open to the public. To my knowledge none of the Commission members, myself includ ed, plan to attend,” Linbeck said. The commission noted in its week ly update that Packer Engineering, one of the four consulting firms hired to conduct the investigation, is almost fin ished measuring, weighing, and classi fying the logs used in the Bonfire stack. This week. Packer will select a geo technical firm to perform soil testing. The investigation teams are also ex pected to finalize a list of people to in terview and what questions to ask. The firms will also present their budgets for the investigative work to commission members this week. The Texas A&M Board of Regents has already autho rized the commission to spend up to $ 1 million on the investigation. Although the investigation is un derway, the four consulting firms have not yet signed contracts, because some legal issues remain unsolved. The firms want the University to pay for their court expenses if they are called to testify or give depositions in Bonfire-related lawsuits. Lawyers at the Texas A&M System General Coun sel’s office have said state law prohibits such arrangements. ^ Voters head to polls for New Hampshire primary s lore nore vi j room eight ro: on’t half :ry! N ;O0 CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Putting aside his attacks on A1 Gore’s honesty, Bill Bradley said voters who support him in the nation’s first presidential primary on Tuesday will be ‘[part of something that is new and fresh.” ; “ We need a politics that’s based on belief and commitment, not tactics and attacks,” Bradley told workers at a research park in Nashua, striking a more subdued tone on the l^ist day of campaigning. ! But in an interview earlier today, he de fended his recent criticisms of Gore’s “mis representations.” | “It was about time to tell the people what yvas the truth,” Bradley said. Gore has accused his rival for the Demo cratic presidential nomination of stooping to “personal vilification.” But he also dropped the combative approach Monday. I “This is a contest. The real light is for our niture,” Gore told reporters after gett ing up at dawn to shake hands with defense plant workers in the freezing rain. In the GOP race, Texas Gov. George W. Bush and conservative activist Gary Bauer tried a different sort of contest — pancake flipping. Bauer, backing up to catch his pan cake, fell off the low stage. Sen. John McCain said he is “confident of victory” in New Hampshire, where polls show him in a tight race with Bush, and feels good about the upcoming South Carolina pri mary, too. I “The message is going to be sent from New Hampshire to America and the world that we’re going to give the government back to the people of the United States, take it out of the hands of the special interests, the big money people, and give it back to you,” Mc Cain told supporters in Keene. Bush also sounded confident: “There’s something going on out there. It’s called en ergy and enthusiasm and excitement, and I like my chances a lot.” As the presidential hopefuls headed into final appearances in New I lampshire, there were signs of increasingly competitive races in both parties. A newly aggressive Bradley criticized Gore over the weekend for an inconsistent voting record on abortion rights and for fund-raising scandals in the last election. Waving a magazine article describing Gore’s ties to a 1996 fund-raising event at a Buddhist temple, the fonner New Jersey senator demanded that the vice president clear the air. “Quite frankly, I think there’s more ex planation that’s needed,” he said. Gore released a letter from friendly con gressional leaders asking Bradley to ease his criticism. Known for his own tough attacks, Gore accused his rival of “stepping down to the level of personal vilification.” Bradley denied that he turned to negative campaigning because Gore passed him in the polls, saying he had endured attacks by the Primaries past vice president for the past six months. “I thought a week before the primary it was important to put these misrepresentations in perspective for the people of New Hamp shire so they could make a judgment,” Bradley said today on ABC’s “Good Morn ing America.” On the GOP side, Bush and McCain were the major rivals. McCain dismissed Bush as simply another establishment figure, with the Arizona senator saying his commitment to campaign finance refomi resonates. “I can beat A1 Gore like a drum,” McCain declared. Number of cars may decrease on campus BY JORDAN DAVIS The Battalion The number of cars clogging the streets of Texas A&M’s campus may soon be reduced, if a recommendation from the University’s Cam pus Access Task Force is approved. The task force, assembled in Spring 1999, presented 120 recom mendations for improving campus transportation to A&M President Ray M. Bowen Monday. The recommendation would minimize the number of vehicles on campus by enhancing the current mass transit system and making it eas ier to access the University as a pedestrian. This would also include lengthening hours of operation for buses and improving the bus ileet’s vehicles. “We were charged with looking at all aspects of transportation at A&M,” said Mary Miller, chair of the task force and associate vice pres ident of administration. “That includes parking, buses, sidewalks, sig nage and anything you can think that affects how people move around campus.” Another recommendation is to move the railroad tracks along Well born Road off campus. Currently, pedestrians, cyclists and drivers com muting between Main and West Campus must compete with frequent trains, which the task force felt were a threat to safety. The task force was formed by Jerry Gaston, fonner vice president for administration, and Tom Williams, director of Parking, Traffic and Transportation Services. Members include staff and faculty, adminis trators from the campus and A&M system, representatives from Stu dent Senate and members of the Bryan-College Station community. Throughout the past year, members have discussed various ways to improve transportation at A&M. Through a Web-based survey and focus See Access on Page 2. Making a Splash Ags' Howard breaks onto world scene. • Director, producer Coulter returns to B-CS. Page 3 • White trash on the highway The Klan's latest publicity should “America ■Mm • Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for details on the closing of Big Bend. • Check out The Battalion online at battalion.tamu.edu