nripri? I Jri Hj riday, Febnan jusniss ball trave :e UT-Pan xas A&M basebe Edinburg this weel e University of Teni n a three-game se jies (1-3) are comirs o the University of io Tuesday at Olser le first time in209j lad been shutout, ays Friday at 3 p.ir. der Saturday at Ip .s try to kt (alive at Td xas A&M women am will head tolia jrday game again: inked Universityo! Raiders, ties (10-10,2-8) g victory over thel lor, which brou game losing strea- ave its workcutft,' iy take on the ach is 18-3,7-3inf ive not lost a home, in. They are ledb)- 1th 14 points per-: tte Pierson, who’: nd with 13.3 poe all heads! i Bowl Clasi cas A&M Softba: ts hands full this*) it competes in hi a Bowl Classic, the Aggies first to le season, and the e 18th-rankedUnK arolina in theirfirsip. day. II also havetobatte iversity of Arizona: egon State Uni« oi State Universit; sity of Georgia. ; competi| J Q\assic cas A&M\jac,VAea] Ames, lowfocttij iis weekend, whil is headed toHous!) iompetition. >ach Ted Nelson a' L head coach c/icz said the teai with hopes of sol >n spots in the arch. MONDAY February 14, 2000 Volume 106 ~ Issue 90 12 pages l XiUk’l ;wr:3 • I tiJZI k T i ^; w i GONG XI FA CAI (Happy New Year)! SALLIE TURNER/Tih Bai iai ion Yintong Zhang, a six-year-old College Station resident, performs a traditional Chi nese dance at the opening of Chinese New Year celebration Saturday night. The cel ebration, sponsored by the China Club, was postponed one week due to scheduling conflicts. This year is the "Year of the Dragon." Prairie View tragedy Campus, students mourns after 4 die, 6 injured in van accident carrying the men’s track team BY APRIL YOUNG The Battalion A cloud of darkness came over the Texas A&M University- Prairie View campus Friday as thousands gathered for a memorial service to mourn the loss of four members of the university’s men’s track team killed in a ear accident Thursday night. Former President George Bush and Texas A&M President Dr. Ray M. Bowen attended the memorial service. The team was en route to a track meet at the University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff the night of tlie accident. The accident occurred in Marshall, Texas. Tito Escobar, a long distance runner and a sophomore electrical engineering major at Prairie View, would have driven the van to Arkansas, but did not attend the meet because of an injury received in an earlier meet. Escobar said that he was told that 21-year-old driver Houston Watson was overcome by a blind spot on the top of a hill. “The car in front slowed down to turn into a grocery store, but they didn’t see the car slowing in front since they were going over the hill,” Escobar said. “They swerved to avoid hitting the car in front of them and lost control of the van causing it to flip over.” According to police investigators, the van Watson was driving did not come into contact with another vehicle during the ac cident, but may have swerved to avoid hitting an oncoming vehicle. Authorities said that although there have been re ports that another vehicle was involved, they are still con ducting an investigation to determine if that is a fact. Escobar lost four team mates in the accident: fresh man Vernon James 11, from Vallejo California; sopho more Jerome Jackson, from Dallas; senior Houston Wat son, from Greenville; and sophomore Samuel Stern, from Jasper. Six others were injured, including the team’s coach. Hoover Wright. As of Sunday, Wright’s condition was upgraded to good, and he was moved out of intensive care at Marshall Regional Medical Center. Lewis Edmonson also was upgraded to good condition at Good Shepherd Medical Center in nearby Longview. Rashad Shelton’s condition has been upgraded from critical to * ** <4 3 • .Mt'V A) Pm serious condition at Louisiana State University Medical Center in Shreveport. Larry Raah, vice president for university operations at Prairie View A&M, compared the fatal accident to the 1999 Aggie Bon fire collapse. “This tragedy is similar to that which happened at A&M in that anytime a large population of young people passes, it is a very sober ing experience,” Raah said. “This is a small campus where most kids know many others and quite a few athletes were very well known, so it’s like it happened to a family member.” Escobar considers the strained calf muscle that prevented him from attending the meet a blessing in disguise. “I was supposed to be driving the van for that meet, but since I was hurt, I didn’t go,” Escobar said. “When I first heard about it, it was hard for me since I was supposed to be driving, but af ter talking to my family, I take it as a blessing. I guess 1 got hurt for a reason.” Escobar said the athletic department at Prairie View is relative ly small and cannot afford charters, so it was typical for students to drive the van to track meets. There has been an outpouring of support for the university fol lowing the tragedy. A moment of silence was held prior to the singing of the “Star Spangled Banner” be fore the A&M men’s basket ball game Sat urday. Lt. Gov. Rick Perry issued the following statement in a press re lease: “It is profoundly sad when individuals representing the future of our state are unable to live out their hopes and dreams of a better tomorrow.My thoughts and prayers are with all those impacted by this tragedy. May they be sustained and strength ened during this time of loss.” The team spent the weekend reflecting on their fallen teammates. “We have just been reminiscing about the people that died and the people that are hurt and some of the things we are going to miss about them,” Escobar said. “It’s going to he hard [without them] because these are people we would see at least six times a week.” CODY WAGES/Tin Batiai.ion Flowers cover the track field at Prairie View A&M Sunday in.memorial of the four track students who lost their lives in van accident Friday. : Former Corps of Cadets commandant, Army colonel dies at 93 Tennis tai irnhuskei ;as A&M men’s It pen its dual mate! at 6 p.m. again! of Nebraska in Lin| h-ranked Aggies lampaign, III. fora .th-ranked UniverS iday at 1p.m. jes are the these] ked team in theBi No. 12 Baylor Urti'* # rainer BY BRANDIE LIFFICK The Battalion Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant of the jlorps of Cadets from 1952 to 1964, died Sat- - day morning at the age of 93. Davis, an Army colonel before taking his Josition as the faculty head of the Corps, [Vas being treated for complications of Jieumoniaat Harris Methodist Hospital in |tephenville, Texas. Davis served at the helm of the Corps of Cadets during the ars in which Texas A&M College became Texas A&M Uni versity (1963), when the Corps be came non-compulsory (1954) and when women were first admitted to A&M on a full-time basis (1963). Texas A&M President Ray M. Bowen was a member of the Corps of Cadets when Col. Davis served as commandant. “He was a very decisive man, yet gentle and kind,” Bowen said. “You always knew that he was the boss.” “Colonel Davis served during a “I remember him as a very in spirational and wonderful role model. He was a wonder ful leader who taught us skill and responsibility.” — Gen. Ted Hopgood current Corps of Cadets commandant period of great tension on campus. He was here when they were first experiment ing with the Corps being optional,” Bowen said. “He and his people did a great job handling the changes.” Gen. Ted Hopgood, current Corps comman dant, was also a member of the Corps when Davis served. “1 remember him as a very inspirational and wonderful role model,” Hopgood said. “He was a wonderful leader who taught us skill and responsibility.” “Colonel Davis was a great commandant and a wonderful Aggie who made the changes occurring at the University at the time an easier transition,” Hopgood said. Services for Davis will be held Tuesday, Feb. 15 at Gardens of Memory Cemetery in Stephenville, Texas. “We always have to remember the great people that con tributed to this University, who strive to make it better,” said For rest Lane, Corps commander and senior political science major. “We need to be thankful for the time that we had Colonel Davis here.” iilE(b, m (PG13) 0:16 12:40 r (PG) ) 20 12:35 : (PG) 30 9:35 BY SARA PROFFITT The Battalion Anya, an eight-month-old German lepherd, was returning from a trip to 'al-Mart with her trainer, Melissa ullivan, when she escaped and was it by a maroon sport utility vehicle. Tie car never stopped. She was left with a broken rear left foot, injured jaw, asal trauma and a cracked cheekbone. Anya is not just any German shepherd — she is a aide dog in training being raised by Sullivan, a junior primal science major, as part of the non-profit group £gie Guide Dog and Service Dogs. Soon after the accident, Sullivan found a clause in Ter training contract that held her, as a trainer, finan- BEiNGjoHNM»|cial|y responsible for Anya’s medical bills. -^fl “Two thousand dollars isn’t something I can easily 0 j -JOtne up with,” Sullivan said. -f But Sullivan has not been left alone with the burden, fhe animal clinic which treated Anya discounted ser- puYmofltf P ces ’ an anonymous donor paid the first medical bill, mda local cafe in Bryan donated $1000. the green ^ Apublic fund, called the Anya Relief Fund, was es- i2°5 4oc ^ ablished by the Aggie Guide Dog and Service Dogs to Rec center fees may rise for the Fall 2000 semester INSIDE raomiD EYE OF THE 1220 240 510 GIRL INTERRI 1:10 4:10 7®* the talentedi e lp a id in Anya’s medical bills, which are still in- 12:50 3 5065flf i: rj Teasing from repeated visits to the animal clinic. THE TEXAS FILM FE? c , „ XI • /- m ta a morrow night: thewhoie* Shelly Novotny, president of Aggie Guide Dog and ervice Dogs, said that at the time of the accident, Anya MELISSA SACKETT/The Battalion Aggie guide dog, Anya, gets personal attention from her trainer, Melissa Sullivan, a junior animal science major. was the club’s best prospect to next be placed with a na tional organization, placing her estimated value at $2,500. As a fully trained guide dog, Anya would fetch $10,000. Novotny said her primary concern is if Anya will be able to finish her formal training. “We’re willing to invest a lot now in order to make her more profitable for someone later,” she said. Novotny believes a possible fear of cars could be a major hindrance to Anya’s training. “As long as she doesn’t have any fear of cars, she should be great,” Novotny said. “I don’t think she has any clue what hit her.” Any donations to the Anya Relief Fund beyond the cost of Anya’s medical bills will be used for unexpect ed future incidents with other guide dogs. Donations can be made at the Student Center in the Koldus Build ing, cubicle nine. Novotny says the club’s purpose is to educate the See Guide Dog on Page 2. BY DANA JAMUS The Battalion Playing a game of racquetball or hitting the weightroom at the Student Recreation Center may cost a few extra dollars next semester if a proposed fee increase is approved. The Rec Center is proposing a net $7 increase in fees to enable the center to cover costs without re ducing the amount or quali ty of services currently of fered, said Dennis Corrington, director of Recreational Sports. The increase will appear as a $27 increase in the fee statement, said Will Hurd, student body president and senior computer science major. However, the net in crease will be only $7. The $20 set aside for the Rec Center under the Student Services fee will now be added to the current Rec Center fee of $50. Approximately three of the seven addition al dollars to be collected from students will be devoted to covering the Rec Center’s current costs, Corrington said. Corrington said increases in minimum wage have meant an increase in the costs of student RUBEN DELUNA/Tm: B labor, and the Rec Center utility costs have risen approximately $300,000, he said. The remaining $4 will go toward building renewal and modification and equipment de preciation, he said. This amount will cover the long-term main tenance of the center. This proposal is still in its initial stages and will be brought up for consideration by the Student Senate this Wednesday. If it is approved, the student body will then vote on whether to adopt the new fees. After follow ing all the procedures, a final de cision should be reached by March 28 or 29, Corrington said. Hurd believes that this pro posal is a “great plan,” because it allows the gradual buildup of funds to maintain the Rec Cen ter instead of having to drasti cally raise prices when the need arises. This plan distributes the costs of long-term building and equipment maintenance across all the students and over the life of the facilities, Hurd said. He applauds the Rec Center’s desire to man age their costs responsibly and thinks other de partments in the University should follow suit. “[The center is] looking out for the best long-term interest of students,” he said. INCftSAtLP COST Of tfumor labor amp umrm* woute tuNP MAfNYWANCf Of THf REC CSNTLR £QUfS>MLNT ANS »UtU?!NCii • Straight from the heart Be consider ate to the op- | posite sex • McCain fights for the Right He is using beer, pizza to [entice voters. Page 11 • King of the Court King has ]record-set- ing day in Colorado /in. • Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for de tails on the Dallas Morn ing News'\\be\ lawsuit. H h laBSESDSB^t^'1 • Check out The Battalion online at battaiion.tamu.edu.