\Y0 (AP) — Like many2 Ids, Hirotada Ototakejn lege, likes basketballs forward to getting marr; jay. : when he cruises down , he causes a sensatu call out his names fers try to talk to (take, who was bottiwi rms and legs, is 's most famous persona a best-selling author, -time news anchor, t-after public speaker, j he is making Japanl an issue it has long*; society's responsible j the disabled, spite its tremendouswea schnology, Japan is aw It place to live foritses I 3.2 million people* al disabilities, stacles to wheelciia id, from flights of stairs ed restaurants andstors I Everett Brtmw; train and subway statioi t have elevators. Campus racism African-American student leaders recount discrimination, prejudice ? his is the third in a three-part series examining issues facing African-American students at Texas A&M University. Leaders ol various African-American student organizations were asked to participate in a round table discussion on the state of racial relations at A&M. The Battalion formulated several questions to facilitate discussion and encouraged open and honest dialogue among the participants. si Nil Mlion Bl.ii i frulei \ || m ti-a-lot iscount. t p.m.-9 p.m.), n.-2:30 p.m.) i.) $25 Cash -6117 yed Pea.) ites early. cpoit.cooi? aimtiu- Itoni Pin Hit L-mttive Iiom t.\< 1.1. conference eitl of OnMigu Pm Phi I'mlerany enl of NA A( P enl ol llldck AtvanweMi ( oimmtiec bih of AUicun-AmerKBii iiuMne.-,* SociiSy MM ol Oennmi Phi Della C hnstiitn Frutenuly I'm of Paii-Hellenic Council uw) pivKident of ■ha Phi Alpha Fraternity rmaUve from the Naluaml Soeiel) ol Black itneeis an oi AlncHii Studenis Aisociauon an of Kappa Alpha P»i Fraienuiy sair of Black Au arenc-v' Comnuciee :w of Delia Signra Theta Soroniy ROBERT HYNECEK I hi BuiMins BY APRIL YOUNG AND MEREDITH HIGH! The Battalion Question 3: How is the academic environ ment on campus, in your classes and the facul ty representation on campus? Do you feel like you are lacking mentors? Johnson: I am going to class, and so 1 am not really worried about that. I know that there is not going to be a whole lot ofblack people in my class, I tnean I KNOW that there is not going to be a whole lot of black people in my class, but that is notan issue to me, personally. Young: My whole thing is that when you go into a class, if it is a small class then you know you are going to be the only one, and then when I go into a larger class, then I know that there is going lobe one ortwo. But it is not that 1 want to see an- other black person, but I think this peers into the problem, how connimanic do i feel going into a class, and turning to the black person next to me and asking if I could borrow their notes, I would feel more comfortable asking a black person. That is my whole issue, I know that I am there to learn. Jenkins: My question is why? It goes back to what I was saying in the beginning, it is your comfort zone, ‘Yeah, 1 am the only one.’ I am one of six [senior] black brothers in the Corps [of Cadets], 1 am a minority [because 1 am] ELIZABETH O’FARRELL /The Battalion Tanir Upshaw (L), a senior health major, Van John son, a senior chemistry major (center) and Preston Jenkins, a junior management major, discuss racial issues at a round-table discussion. black, and then 1 am a minority because 1 am black and in the Corps, I think we have to get out ofthis mind set of us and them. We are all students here at A&M, we are all trying to get the degree so we can go out there and get a job. We don't try to mingle with them. I think that [the] only way we are all going to truly come together is if we go to them. We should n’t be waiting for them to come to us and try to make this thing work. We have to go to them, because the majority of the time, they feel uncomfortable around us anyway. But if we are secure in who we are, then we should be able to go them. James: I don’t know about all of you, but 1 know that I have been through plenty occa sions when you go into a class and nobody sits near you. T hat hurts my feelings. Every body sits around me, [and] people will get up and move. Several people: I have not had that hap pen to me. James: Every time I go to sit down, peo ple will move. Ogungbemi: Yeah, that is true, but then 1 get up and 1 go sit beside them. They are not going to ask you to get up. James: It is like ‘Oh lord, I am the represen tative again.’ For me, 1 am actually afraid. Be cause sometimes they will ask a question, and 1 know that I know the answer. 1 am afraid that if I am wrong other people in the class are going to think, ‘Oh that black person in class, she is stu pid.’ 1 am just saying this for me. I don’t want my people to be misrepresented. Might: Do you agree with that? Johnson: That is not a race issue, that is your own personal issue. 1 will say whatever I think and 1 will be confident in it that I said what I was thinking, and if I am wrong then I am wrong. Anybody else could have been wrong. It is not because of the fact that I am black that 1 was wrong. 1 was just wrong [because] I did not know the answer. Ogunghemi: Be truthful. Some of them don’t want to sit with you. Most of the time some of thefFi are scared, and they will not sit beside you. Johnson: There are some white people that I am scared of. Might: What are (white people] scared of? Upshaw: Of what they don’t know. They are scared of the unknown. They don’t know who I am. 1 am a black person. They don’t know about my heritage or about my culture. They are scared to get to know me. Why would you be scared to get to know somebody? They are scared of the unknown. Might: So it’s getting to know some one as an individual, and not as the token black person in the class? Johnson: But this has to do with self segregation. We don’t take the active role to try and go and meet people. Sometimes a black person sitting by themselves in the room is because they want to be left alone. James: Usually, it is someone who is Hispanic or Asian that will come and sit beside me, but it is not someone of the white race. Ogunghemi: Yeah, this is true, but then some of the Africans are afraid to sit be side the black Americans, because they are afraid that you will laugh at their accents. See Round Table on Page 6 Backsteet’s back, all right! CODY WAGES/Tiii Bahai ion The Backsteet Boys, AJ McLean, Nick Carter, Kevin Richardson, Howie Dorough and Brian Littrell, perform in Houston at the Compaq Center Monday and Tuesday night. They are touring the U.S. to promote their Millennium album. Prairie View coach mourns loss Parents sue Ford DALLAS (AP) — The parents of two of the four Prairie View A&M stu dents killed in a van crash earlier this month have filed a defects lawsuit against the van’s manufacturer, Ford Motor Co. In a lawsuit filed Monday in Marshall federal court, the families of Samuel Stums and Jerome Jack- son accuse Ford of design and mar keting defects in its 15-passenger van, as well as breach of warranty for selling an allegedly defective vehicle. “This is the fifth incident in two months where college kids have been seriously injured or killed in vehicles that they and their fami lies trusted were safe,” said Jay English, the lead attorney for the two families. Ford spokeswoman Susan Krusel, who said she had not seen the law suit, would not comment Monday af ternoon. However, she said the van model’s rollover performance “is as good or better than peer vehicles in its class.” Attorneys for the Sturns and Jack- son families claim Ford vans such as the one involved in the crash exhibits stability problems when heavily loaded. PRAIRIE VIEW (AP) — For a while, 71-year old Hoover Wright wondered why his life was spared and four of his Prairie View A&M athletes died when their van crashed en route to a track meet nearly three weeks ago. Now he knows. Someone had to tell the team they had to put the tragedy behind them. The Panthers followed their leader’s words by defending successfully their Southwestern Athletic Conference indoor track championship Sunday in Baton Rouge, La. Ron Nelson won the high jump and finished sec ond in the long jump. Lewis Turner won the 55 me ters and placed second in the 100 meters, and the Panthers easily outpointed runner-up Grumbling State 132-101 1/2. Broken ribs, a shoulder injury and numerous bumps and bruises suffered in the Feb. 10 acci dent couldn’t dampen Wright’s pride as he spoke of the team’s victory while recuperating Tuesday at his home. “I’m very proud of them,” Wright said. “We asked them to look forward and to step up even though part of our team died and some got broken up like me. I didn’t go to the meet but apparently they did a good job.” In addition to the four people killed, five athletes were injured. Those athletes, along with Wright, are recovering. None competed in the weekend indoor meet at Baton Rouge. “I made the remark that what am 1 left here for unless it was to continue to try to inspire these young people not only in track and field but in life in gen eral,” Wright said. “My point of view to them was every time they get a chance to compete, they should give it their best because they don’t know if a second or third chance will be available to them.” “ . . every time they get a chance to compete, they should give it their best because they don't know if a second or third chance will be available to them” — Hoover Wright Prairie View A&M track coach Killed in the crash were Houston DeWayne Watson, 21, of Greenville, the driver; Jerome De- shaun Jackson, 21, of Dallas; Samuel Jason Stums, 20, of Jasper; and Vernon Maurice James II, 18, of Vallejo, Calif. “1 was asleep when the accident started,” Wright said. “Now 1 have an understanding of what it’s like See Wright on Page 2. the experiment ;e. i Balance Rotation leel alignment Sales figures show jump in local business 693-8575 ' atch It f es, tulips) s s Accepted. day 707 Texas Ave. Bryan 822-2141 STAFF AND WIRE The Battalion Texas A&M contributed $766.5 million to the Bryan- College Station economy in 1999, almost $68 million more |an in 1998. These figures are a result of an A&M in-house study re vested by President Dr. Ray M. Bowen. “Texas A&M continues to move forward in many mean ingful ways that are highly beneficial to both the University and the Bryan-College Station community,” Bowen said in apress release. “We are pleased to continue to make a posi tive contribution on the area’s economy, and we are grateful all the support that we receive locally.” According to the study, approximately $191.9 million %ies from A&M students. This is an increase of about $4 million from 1998. An average $4,418 per student was spent ideally last year, with the majority going toward food, hous- ;, clothing, school supplies and recreation. The study also showed that visitors to A&M, including Prospective students and families, accounted for $62 million, V increase of $8.9 million from 1998, and campus con- ^Oiction contracts totaled $41.8 million, a drop of about $1.9 A&M’s payroll exceeded the half-billion dollar mark for ’i’ofirst time last year, totaling $513 million. Bowen said this amount is seen as a direct contribution ft a H a H a l» mm W W i* W m I W IMPACT University's Students $191.9 mil ♦Typical A&M Student spent $ 4 f 41 8 locally •Major Categories for student expenditures; -food and housing -clothing -school supplies -recreation RUBEN DELUNA/THi: Battalion to the local economy because the money is presumed to be spent in the local community or deposited in local banking and thrift institutions. The study also found the number of people attending ath letic events, entertainment events, commencement exercis es, continuing education programs and visitors to the George Bush Presidential Library Complex totaled 953,911. This is an increase of 121,498 from ’98, with gains of89,000 more people attending Aggie football games and 81,362 more people attending Aggie baseball games. The study attributed the large increase of baseball game attendees to A&M’s hosting two NCAA regional tournaments. Task force discusses transportation issues BY KENNETH MACDONALD The Battalion To Student Body President Will Hurd, parking on campus is not a prob lem, it is a solution to a larger problem — getting people on and off campus. Hurd spoke Tuesday at an open fo rum about the future of parking and transportation on campus sponsored by the Campus Access Task Force and MSC Current Issues Awareness. The task force was fonned in Sep tember 1998 to look for comprehensive solutions to the problems of a growing student population and transporting them around campus. Hurd said the task force members are looking at ways to diversify the the modes of transportation on campus, while limit ing access to individual automobiles. Some currently proposed suggestions include improving the Borrow-a-Bike system, expanding bicycle routes, in creasing the effectiveness of the bus tran sit system and even installing a small scale monorail through campus. Jonathan Smith, head of faculty sen ate planning committee and associate professor of geography, said he has heard many complaints from students about parking and transportation. “All of this has convinced me that universal satisfaction with the campus access system is probably impossible. Not everyone is going to be delighted all the time,” Smith said. “The dissatisfac tion with the system is sometimes not a problem with the system, but it is a prob lem with the people using the system.” The system of campus access has been in place since 1988, Smith said, and a common misconception is that the sys tem is perfect, and it is the administrators who are mismanaging it. “These are people who are doing a yeoman’s service to operate a system that is badly outdated,” Smith said. Task Force member Sheryl Wine, ex ecutive director of PTTS, said that they plan to make more rise of “hubs” that would be located on campus central to different modes of transportation. As an example, Wine said the future West Campus parking would be one of these hubs. “This is where they know they can park their car and find different modes of travel to get to where ever they need to go.” Students will find a bus stop like the one by Wehner, which Wine said is the most effective stop presently on campus. There would be a place for students to See Access on Page 2. INSIDE 9 • Ags explode against Islanders ^ A&M defeats ^0^' Page 7 • Breaking up is hard to do Students cope with leaving their pets behind. Page Unn^^ss^ry Roughnes NFLplayei V arrests de- i ) mand league at tention. Page 1 • Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for de tails on the United Way luncheon. • Check out The Battalion online at battalion.tamu.edu.