- - Ml Jl'WlgMI 1 <- '-i; -. m m ■■ ' ,.. p piiM ' \ - , m ' ' " m;': n V'iI^ ^ \ > '' ' - ' / ' \ , '{ . ' Kf exa^parole 1 — Page? '( ' y '' !.■>« m ■ n m-w m ■ i .w wn-. f -w. - On the road again Ags ■■ ' ' O'- , y'' v - V ^ s - =- Netters braced for Rice tourney MMV Texas ASM m m V • The Battalion Yol. 80 No. 116 CJSPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, March 21,1985 ■d pops series p«fl| ill be i-esched'M President Charlo the proposali lK)th side die agreenieiH, Tuition hike man, attorney k jii, said the unit ileased with ttiisp sents subslaniiali ovements for said. nion spokeswoauiH ud slie liHiks TonS to plavingtheiisB said he wasimitnB ill approved by the House Associated Press 'p in and medt ■ AUSTIN — The House approved I bill Wednesday which would in- j-ease college tuition at state-fi- ijk* we tan ^Bancedcolleges in the fall, in go tin andlwiB g C p iescnIat i vt . s a | s<) tentatively this Sun Belt® Approved a bill that would allow Khool administrators to expel stu- t dnits who present a danger to other - theftsi Students in a classroom. ii A tu >tion bill introduced by Rep Wilhemina Delco, I)-Aus- double undergraduate sident tuition for the 1985-19K6 hod year. Non-resident odd triple. Delco said the bill would enable Jhe legislature Ur fund state colleges Bind universities at or near current •fi.'l percent in ISBunding levels. The proposal would ■vious year, accoBenerate an extra S200 million in artment of ^Bpe revenues during the next two B’eais. L*d 87,781 motonB stolen in lexasB The bill has been forwarded to ed to 82,522 a (4 (he Senate’for approval. If passed bv |he Senate and signed.by Gov. Mark hite, the bill would raise tuition for lindergraduate resident students tn $4 per semester credit hour to for the 1985-85 school year and |hento$14 for the 1986-87. Tuition ivould then be raised $2 every year mil it reached $20 per hour. (effort dated Press ON — Auto t cs showed. Dallas, San Anlonj ar communities 4.21 percent ofi chicle) thefts,”hj resident of theft obile Theft Bm City Sun. County account ,000 of those stole Harris Count) more than 35,( “d. 'h as these It nt efforts araotj i as the NAB e Departmental) unity Organ® Unit. olice Capt, ch cooperative e yed a key ral vehicle tie talk cars, the an leer won’t knoi Investigating auf art. Evenanexpt gator could ha« pass by and Id as stolen.” irience minium in fours: ed facing ble for Non-resident tuition would be raised from $40 per hour to $120 for the 1985-86 year and then to $180 for 1986-87. Non-resident stu dents would then be required to pay 100 percent of their education costs. The bill would also raise tuition for post-graduate studies. The school expulsion bill by Rep. Bill Haley, D-Center, would give lo cal school districts authority to sus pend a student for up to six days a semester if the student presents a danger in the school. The education reform package last year called for alternative educa tion programs for students rather than suspension or expulsion, when ever possible. Another vote is needed to send the bill to the Senate. The bill would provide school dis tricts with an option rather than re quiring them to seek other educatio nal programs for the troubled students. Haley, chairman of the House Public Education Committee, said Texas schools are incurring a $9 mil lion price tag for alternative educa tion programs under the current system. Several attempts by Rep. A1 Gran- off, D-Dallas, to amend the bill failed. “This is going to affect thousands of felonies in the state of Texas,” Cranoff said. He said the expulsions will only put the troubled students on the streets, thus leading to addi tional problems. An amendment by Rep. Gregory. Luna, D-San Antonio, would allow the student to receive partial credit for homework the student makes up as a result of his or her suspension. The House also tentatively ap proved, 83-55, a bill by Rep. Ed Kuempel, R-Seguin, which would exempt independent school districts and their contractors from having to pay prevailing local wages on con struction projects. Kuempel said the rates are in tended to protect local workers but some rates, which vary drastically among school districts, cause less competitive pressure and higher bids. In other action the House ap proved and sent to the Senate a bill that would raise the price of a mar riage license from $7.50 to $15. House members also tentatively approved a proposal that would ex tend a law requiring three signed copies of drug prescriptions. One would be kept by the physician, one by the pharmacist and the other would go to the Department of Pub lic Safety. KE SANCHEZ Down For The Count Ross Volunteer juniors (left to right) Mor- Wednesday afternoon. Mud Day is a day in gan I^vy, Mark Scjhulze and Kevin Morton the spring semester, picked by the juniors, force the head of senior Sean McCaffery into giving them a chance to “get even” with the a mud pit. The RV held its annual Mud Day seniors. House initiates bill requiring stiffer penalties for hazing By TRENT LEOPOLD Staff Writer Hazing incidents at Texas A&M helped initiate a Texas House bill to increase the penalties of hazing, an assistant to State Rep. David Patron- ella, D-Houston, said Tuesday. Patronella filed a bill March 7 that would increase the maximum pun ishment for hazing to one to two years in jail and a $5,000 to $10,000 fine. Tom Reed, assistant to Patronella said the recent death of Texas A&M cadet Bruce Goodrich awoke the public to the fact that hazing is a crime. And that crime should carry a harsher punishment, he said The current maximum punish ment for hazing is three months in jail and a fine of $250. Under the bill, consent of the hazing victim would be no legal de fense and hazing would be possible even if the victim gives his consent. The bill recommends a fine of $500 to $1,000 and three to six months in jail for hazing involving no injuries, and a $1,000 to $5,000 fine and six months to one year in jail for hazing causing an injury. The bill recommends a $5,000 to $10,000 fine and one to two years in jail for hazing resulting in death. The bill also says alumni organiza tions are guilty of hazing if they kno wingly permit, encourage or assist in a hazing incident. Earlier this month Corps of Cadet sophomore Joseph Gassman of Frankfurt, West Germany was sus pended for forcing a freshman to perform unauthorized exercises. Nine upperclassmen have been summoned to hearings in connec tion with another Corps incident in volving 10 cadets. According to a report released by the Committee to Halt Useless Col lege Killings in New York, hazing will likely be a criminal act by the endof'1985. Seventeen states already have laws specifically outlawing hazing and setting up criminal penalties for hazing. v Student Senate passes housing bill Grad student dorm space recommended By JERRY OSLIN Staff Writer he Student Senate passed a bill Wednesday night that recommends the University Housing Office re serve dormitory space for single graduate students entering Texas A&M for one year. “There is dorm space on campus that is not being filled,” said Sen. Brian Hay. “This bill will help attract graduate students because on-cam pus housing is a factor in deciding what school to go to.” But Sen. Rhonda Duckers dis agreed with the bill because she said the University currently is not able to house all incoming freshmen. “There’s an emotional need for freshmen to live on campus,” she said. “A lot of freshmen need sup port and guidance from other stu dents.” The Senate also passed a bill that calls on the University to estabish a coed dormitory on campus. The bill said one dormitory should be established as coed on an experimental basis to find out if there is a demand for such housing. “There have been coed dorms in the past at Texas A&M,” Hay said. “Security wouldn’t be a problem be cause everybody would know every body else in the dorm.” But Duckers said some students wouldn’t like the bill because they would be moved out to make room for the other students. “People have a feeling for their dorm,” she said. “They aren’t going to like being moved out to make room for some other student.” The two housing bills were passed even though they were rejected by RHA. Hay said RHA rejected the grad uate housing bill because it would take away dormitory space from en tering freshmen. It gave no reason for rejecting the coed housing bill, he said. The Senate was scheduled to vote on a bill that would call on the Uni versity to prohibit demonstrations in and around the Memorial Student Center but Wayne Roberts, vice president of student services, said it was killed in committee. The Senate also passed a bill that would allow all Student legislation to be forwarded to the president of the University as well as to John Koldus, vice president of student services. Tom Urban, vice president of aca demic affairs and the bill’s sponsor, said reporting to the University’s president would make the Senate more effective. “President Vandiver has received only two pieces of Student Senate legislation in the past two years,” he said. “By reporting directly to him, he will have the opportunity to see all our legislation and that will make us more effective.” Hay also said the Senate should report to the president. “We represent the the students of Texas A&M and our legislation should go to the top to where the power is.” he said. Late in the meeting, an attempt was made by Urban and some sen ators to override Student Body Pres ident David Alder’s veto of a resolu tion that would have recognized the Gay Student Services Organization. But the motion to override the veto was voted down in a voice vote. Last core curriculum hearing today By KIRSTEN DIETZ Staff Writer Today is the last chance for stu dents and faculty to express their opinion of the Faculty Senate’s rec ommended core curriculum. The Core Curriculum Subcom mittee will hold a public hearing at 4:30 p.m. in 504 Rudder Tower. After a low turnout for the first hearing, attendance improved sig nificantly for the second hearing, Patty Steele, Faculty Senate secre tary, says. Steele says while only a few stu dents attended, about 15 faculty members stayed for the entire meet ing. Dr. Paul Parrish, vice chairman of the subcommittee, says most of the response to the recommendations have been positive. “But most of what we have heard has been aimed at offering modifica tions or improvements,” he says. The Faculty Senate will not vote on the core curriculum until the April or May meeting. If the Senate passes the proposal, it must be approved by Texas A&M President Frank E. Vandiver before it can go into effect. It would not be applicable to the students for several years. The core curriculum report rec ommends that each student take six hours each of speech and writing skills, mathematical or logical rea soning, cultural heritage and social science and eight hours of science. This is in addition to the state re quirements of six hours of both American history and political sci ence and the University requirement of four hours of physical education. Also, the report recommends that each student take one course in com puter science, unless they have com pleted at least one course prior to entering the University or can dem onstrate proficiency on an examina tion. The report also proposes that each student complete two semesters of a foreign language unless they have taken two semesters in high school or can demonstrate profi ciency in a second language. State Senate passes new drinking bill Associated Press AUSTIN — The Senate voted Wednesday to make it illegal to drink and (drive in Texas, a measure sponsor Bill Sarpalius said he hopes will eventually save lives. “A number of states have come out and shown it will, indeed, reduce the number of (traffic) fatalities,” Sarpalius, D-Canyon, told the Sen ate. “Many of you have run surveys in your own senatorial districts, and you have found that there has been a tremendous amount of support throughout the state to ban open containers.” Sarpalius’ bill, which cleared com mittee Monday only after he agreed to limit the drinking ban to drivers — not passengers — was sent to the House on voice vote. If approved by the House, the bill would go into ef fect Sept. 1. The measure would make it illegal for a driver to drink or be caught holding an open alcoholic beverage container while operating a motor vehicle. Violators would be given a ticket with fines running up to $200. “What the Department of Public Safety tells us is tnat just by having a law on the books to make it illegal to drink and drive, 80 percent of the people will comply witn it," Sarpalius told reporters. Asked what law officers could do, for example, to stop a driver from simply passing an open beer to a pas senger, Sarpalius said, “What we find is that in most cases if two peo ple are sitting in the’front seat, both are usually drinking ... and if one person is caught holding two cans of beer ... the peace officer has a pretty good case in that situation.” Senators also approved and sent to the House proposals that would: • Abolish the Texas Merit System Council at a savings of $276,866 to the state over the next two years. The council, in operation since 1981, has provided a merit-based personnel system for state employ ees in accordance with federal regu lations, which no longer require con tinuation of the council as a separate agency. • Require a paid legislator rep resenting a person before a state agency to file a statement describing what he has been hired to do. • Allow the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retarda tion to use pi ojected costs of provid ing services so the agency can collect maximum reimbursement rates, which should result in a gain of $5.9 million a year for the state. • Authorize proceeds from the sale of Permanent School Fund land to be used to acquire other land for that fund, which finances Texas’ public schools. Reagan press conference scheduled for tonight Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan will hold his third news conference this year at 8 p.m. to day in the East Room of the White House, sticking with his new goal of meeting with the press once a month. It will be Reagan’s 29th news conference since he took office in 1981, and the first since the death March 11 of Soviet leader Konstantin U. Chernenko. The president is expected to be questioned closely on his express ion of interest in a summit with the new Kremlin chief, Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Reagan’s last news conference was on Feb. 21.