PETS ab puppies. ye : | ales. Papers! S400. 979-69! )di. :AL ESTAT[| odd St. Bryan. | eMot, 2-c^ruesd a y, November 27, 2001 .yard, W/D, 695-7124. BATTALION Page 9 les needed. ‘ s. 775-8941 Juplex, 2bdroi yP, S280/mo. proud tradition returns to Aggieland As Bonfire fades. Fish Drill Team a welcome addition A ggies have endured several losses this semester, including the possibility that Bonfire will not burn in 2002 and a home loss to their biggest rival. However, Or Army is not dead. The nationally famous Corps of Cadets Fish Drill Team, a tradition that students can take pride in, is set to return, and unfortunately, its return has been overshadowed by other events. As Bonfire’s future hangs in the balance, students should begin to turn their attention to other, more posi tive traditions that make Texas A&M unique. While many in the Aggie community have been focusing on the future of Bonfire, the administration provided a welcome sur prise by announcing the return of Fish Drill Team. The Fish Drill Team, created in 1946 by a group of freshman cadets, was famous for winning national championships in precision drill competitions. The team was disbanded in 1997 after one of the team’s members complained of physical assaults from the upperclassmen advisers. No time was set for reinstatement. Although many students have expressed their appreciation for having an A&M tradition return, some former members of the Fish Drill Team have not displayed the same excitement. Concerns have been expressed that the new Fish Drill Team will be a watered-down, more user-friendly ver sion of the original without the rigor ous physical training that made the Fish Drill Team famous in years past. The new Fish Drill Team, which bears the same name as the original, will be vastly different and Aggies should be proud of the changes it is making. Changes were made appar ent when Michelle Peters, a junior interdisciplinary studies major, was named one of two senior cadets on the new squad. In the history of the Fish Drill Team, no female has ever held the position. Old members of the team have expressed their fear that these changes will make the new Fish Drill Team little more than a mockery of the original. They have pointed to the rigorous drills and exercises that made the Fish Drill Team respected nationwide as proof that their toughness cannot be matched by the new version. The team will also not have the advan tage of traditions passed down by previous Fish Drill Team members. The fact is, however, that while the Fish Drill Team of the past may have won numerous national championships and made appearances in “A Few Good Men” and “Courage Under Fire,” they embar rassed themselves when they were caught hazing members of their team. There is no excuse for such behavior. Old members of the Fish Drill Team can speak of honor, commitment and discipline, but the bottom line is that their past behavior is to blame for the current state of the Fish Drill Team. Some former members of the Fish Drill Team have said Peters and Jerry Aymond, the other senior adviser and a junior history major, have not earned their positions and know nothing about the Fish Drill Team. Their argument circumvents a very important point: there would not be a need for a reinvented Fish Drill Team if the original had not made a stupid mis take by physically abusing members of their team. Peters and Aymond have never been members of the Fish Drill Team, but not through any fault of their own. As a result, they cannot be held responsible for the lack of Fish Drill Team experience. Aggies who hold A&M’s traditions near to their heart should be excited about the reinstatement of the Fish Drill Team. A Fish Drill Team without hazing is something Texas A&M can be proud of, regardless of whether it wins any national championships. Peters and Aymond have been placed in a difficult position in being asked to take the reins of an organization with an unsur passed tradition of competitive excellence. Hopefully they can also mold the Fish Drill Team into an organiza tion with an unsurpassed tradition of moral excellence and respect. Richard Bray is a junior journalism major. Teach the younger students lechase about Bonfire ate sublest tee*® b aufeath* ' ^ [This goes out to all the upperclassmen. You -'7 fcthat the fate of Bonfire is up to the Classes 12004 and 2005, but you will not tell us eded asap f jse in Biyan. $ -1141 iwto keep the tradition alive. I am a fresh- aeded for sifts? an and I know more than you think I know $285/mo., onbut Bonfire. I have been to three Bonfires ^ the past and listened to good bull stories (or spring sere;:> | y ears f rom m y brother and his friends | 1 caiiaeo-s':; ^ were members of the Corps of Cadets. needed start™ ; ^Every time I think, read, or talk about sterling Univer,-rffire, I cry because I know what it means tOAggies and to me. However, many of my needed, no « Wlow freshmen cannot really grasp the con ns, for springser: cept behind Bonfire. They do not truly under- 'uttle ^ose r'= i nd that is the s ' n g ,e largest event that ated the family ties and bonding of fellow ies. Now I am seeing the lack of dorm |ity, lack of respect between non-regs and rps members and an overall lack of true ;ie spirit. So, I am calling on upperclass- n to stop telling the underclassmen that it for spring seMjp to us you are still here and this is still December g® j/mo. Call Roiy y0Lr University. ^l,Take us under your wing and show us the id. spring, 2Mrin %$ of Bonfire and all that goes with it and to campus, on: show us what we can do to keep this tradition s. Call Ben 2f“ CHAD MALLAM • THE BATTALION injured or killed in the collapse have already received financial compensation, and more money will not undo the tragedy. For those students who are named as defendants, these lawsuits are grossly unfair. They made Bonfire as safe as they possibly could. No one could foresee what would happen. Not only that, but those stu dents who were injured or killed were partic ipating in the same way as those being sued. Will the families also sue themselves because their children knew they were tak ing part in a dangerous, if not lethal, student activity, and did nothing to correct it? I truly wish that those families suing would realize that sometimes accidents happen and find a more constructive way to heal. Georgia school board ruling on cheerleader routines senseless luttle, close 34 jeded. Duplexed- Call TinaTTW© e for spring »' ith. Call MelisS 8611 alive, forever. d at Sterling llf»- all (830)625-75^ imate wanted for j m/2bth, Arbors j +1/2bills. Coirj bed. 694-2283 \ Erin Stock Class of 2005 lawsuits not the way to heal and move on ^VlCES In response to the Nov. 26 editorial “Wrong isive Driving. •» Ticket dismiss: "f| M-T(6pm-9piT |i i.&Sat.- Fri(6pf;J believe these lawsuits filed by the fami- 1), Sat(8am-2 |jj s w hose children were injured or killed lowest priceai: !are unnecessary. I understand the pain ste.217. 84t pd grief those families have in their any. (CP-00171 hearts from the 1999 Aggie Bonfire col- pse, and I know that even after two years iat pain still has not subsided. However, Fest; Hope Prsi; tation 695-9193 : O ' tlon Peeu ' suing A&M administrators and students isava Yoga-Tofr monetary compensation is not the (979)268-3838 pit way to go about the healing process. ^Iplany of the families have said that the ■““^/lawsuits are not about the money, but an tr over low ... , , ^ 7 "* RRFAlr mp * t0 ma ' C HAZING: Any action taken or situation created whether on or off university premises, to produce mental or physical discomfort, embarrassment, harassment or ridicule. Th£ DUG* RT6&NVif-(S>