Talcing his position at the /1 uh of things, the writer contemplates the mystery of the universe. ■I lillllllililii . Sully’s Symposium •• A8cM run-off candidates to face off Page 4 mii iiiiitil Here’s mud in your eye ggies in baseball series, 2-1 ilfJpageS I """" MMWTexasA&MW^ m m V • The Battalion Vol. 80 No. 123 GSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Monday, April 1,1985 Rep. Delco to speak here tonight New tuition bill to be discussed By JERRY OSLIN Siuti Writer The chairman of the House Higher Education Committee, State Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Austin, will speak on the current tuition bill and higher education tonight at 7 in Rudder Theater. The speech is sponsored by the Black Awareness Committee and the MSG Political Forum. The House recently passed a bill, sponsored by Delco, that would in crease tuition for state college and university students. Under Delco’s bill, resident tu ition would increase from the cur rent $4 per semester hour to $8 for the 1985-86 school year and to $12 for the 1986-87 year. The bill also would raise tuition for non-resident students from the current $40 per semester hour to $120 for the 1985-86 school year and to $180 for the 1986-87 year. The bill also calls for 25 percent of all tuition to be set aside for student financial aid. The bill must be passed by the State Senate and signed by Gov. Mark White before it becomes law. But a plan proposed last week by Lt. Governor Bill Hobby and sup ported by State Sen. Kent Caperton, D-Bryan, would raise resident tu ition to $ 12 for the 1985-86 school year and to $16 for the 1986-87 year. The Hobby plan also calls for 9 percent of the tuition increase to be set aside for student financial aid. Gay rights forum, debate to be held By ANN CERVENKA Stuff Writer Is the closet open? The answer to this question con cerning the civil rights of homosex uals will be the topic of a forum and a debate this week. Monday, members of Gay Student Services will speak at Rudcler Foun tain. Political Forum and Great Is sues will co-sponsor the open forum from noon to 2 p.m. Tuesday, a debate, sponsored by Political Forum, will feature Gara Lamarche, director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Texas, and Houston City Councilman John Goodner. The ACLU is known for fighting to protect the civil rights of any group, whether far left or far right, said Jim Schicker, Political Forum national programs director. Lamarche said he lobbies and works through the court to protect civil rights. “We exist to support the protec tions in the Bill of Rights,” La marche said. These rights include freedom of speech and press and due process. “Our concern is about equal rights for homosexuals,” he said. “No one should discriminate on the basis of personal qualities.” In January, the Houston City Council passed an ordinance that would outlaw discrimination against homosexuals in city employment. Once the referendum went to the voters, Goodner led a fight against See Gay rights, page 7 Correction The Battalion incorrectly re ported Friday that graduation ceremonies are being held May 3, at 3 p.m.. Tne ceremonies are at 2 p.m. May 3. The Battalion regrets the error. Petition filed concerning voting rights Hey, Where'd They Go? Photo by GREG BAILEY These cadets resort to hiding under cover to shelter themselves from the cold, rainy weather that blew in for Saturday’s March to the Brazos. This year the Corps raised over $47,000 to benefit the March of Dimes char ity. Donations linked to defense? PACs’ spending rises Associated Press WASHINGTON — The nation’s largest defense contractors have doubled their political donations since President Reagan took office, with the top 20 firms pouring $3.6 million into 1984 congressional and presidential campaigns. The surge in campaign contribu tions occurred as government con tracts to those firms swelled over last four years by nearly 150 percent to $69 billion in 1984. Opinions differ, however, on what effect the dona tions have on def ense spending. Sen. John Warner, R-Va., the top congressional recipient, said the con tributions gain the firms no special attention. But Fred Wertheimer, president of Common Cause, the cit izens lobby, called the political dona tions “a critical part of the lobbying process.” An Associated Press review of contributions by political action com mittees, or PACs, affiliated with the 20 leading defense contractors, found that most top congressional recipients are supporters of Rea gan’s $1.8 trillion arms buildup, in cluding many on committees that handle military spending bills. Of the 20 House members receiv ing more than $15,000 from those PACs, 17 voted last week to approve the president’s request for $1.5 bil lion to build 21 more MX missiles. Thirteen of the 14 senators who re ceived more than $30,000 backed Reagan on the MX. Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., was the only excep tion. Through its PAC, Rockwell Inter national Corp. increased contribu tions from $59,625 in 1980 to $328,440 in 1984, a jump of 450 percent, according to Federal Elec tion Commission figures. Rockwell spokesman Dan O’Neal said the firm’s higher PAC spending came from new employees hired to work on the bigger defense contracts and from larger donations by more senior employees who have an “in creased awareness of the value” of political contributions. Corporate PACs raise their funds through voluntary contributions from salaried employees. Trade as sociations, political interest groups and labor unions also have PACs. L,ockheed Corp., the fifth biggest contractor, was the heaviest PAC spender among the top 20 defense firms, contributing $420,191 to can didates for federal office in 1984. That total represented a 325 percent increase over four years earlier. Lockheed’s Pentagon contracts rose from $2 billion to $5.2 billion during that period. By MICHAEL CRAWFORD Stuff Writer The Texas A&M chapter of the American Civil Liberies Union filed a petition with the U.S. Justice De partment Friday requesting an inves tigation of possible violations of the Voting Rights Act by the City of Col lege Station. Also, the group has asked the Texas Civil Liberties Union to con sider filing a class action lawsuit against College Station and the Col lege Station Independent School District for infringing upon regis tered voters’ civil rights. If taken, both actions raise the possibility that the results of the coming election may be disqualified. The possible actions against the city ancl CSISD were prompted by the city’s combining of precincts 20, 21 and 35 for the April 6 elections. A&M Civil Liberties Union rep resentative Chris Bowers said the consolidation discriminates against students. The three precincts are al most entirely composed of student voters. The petition filed with the Justice Department says the city may have violated section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. That section says any change to existing voting regula tions must not “have the purpose and will not have the effect of deny ing or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color.” Bowers said in this case the minority is the students who don’t have transporta tion to vote at the designated polling place at the old College Station Mu nicipal Building behind Northgate. The city has used the consolidated districts for local elections since 1981 because student voter turnout tradi- tonally has been low. In the 1984 city elections, only 27 people cast their ballots at the combined precinct. However, Bowers said the consolida tion is not the result of low turnout, but the cause. “If you consolidated all the voting boxes in the school district and put them in Millican,” Bowers said, “I guarantee you maybe 200 people out of thousands of registered voters would vote. Then the people in the school district could say, ‘See, there’s a low voter turnout and therefore CS council candidates disc uss priorities By MICHAEL CRAWFORD Stuff Writer The quality of life, the devel opment of the industrial park and continued area growth were the cho ruses most frequently sung at Fri day’s College Station city council candidate forum. Two candidates are running for Place 1 which is currently occupied by Alvin Prause. Roy Kelly, the owner of A-l Auto Parts, and Fred Brown, the owner of Fred Brown Mazda-BMW, both want tougher scrutiny of the city’s budget. Kelly says his top three priorities for the city are evaluating the city’s financial position, bringing in more industry and keeping citizens in volved in the community. Brown says keeping the quality of life, solic iting new industries to come to the area and running the city like a busi ness are his top goals. Kelly says the Industrial Devel opment Foundation should work more closely with the council while Brown says the industrial park should be turned over to the Indus trial Foundation and that Texas A&M should be used as a carrot to attract new businesses. Both men agreed, the city should not use money refunded from elec trical overcharges to finance a city li brary. Kelly says the money should be channeled back into the utilities department for future use, but Brown says the money should be re turned to consumers. A non-binding questionaire con cerning the library is on the April 6 ballot. City officials are using the bal lot to determine if taxpayers would accept a two cent increase per $100 evaluation in their property taxes. Place 3 has three candidates com peting for the position. Roy Hann Jr., head of the environmental engi neering divison of A&M’s Civil Engi neering Experiment Station; Mike Hachtman, an industrial distribution major from Dallas; and Terri Tongco, a one-year member of the Planning and Zoning Commission, are battling for the position vacated earlier this year by Vicky Reinke. Re- inke moved to Maryland. Hann says his top priorities are at tacking problem areas that exist and improving the quality of life. Hacht man says maintaining the quality of life, finishing the industrial park and improving communication between the city and the University are his goals. Financial accountability for all departments, improving business growth to help expand the tax base and maintaining neighborhood qual ity are Tongco’s top priorities. Hann says the construction of a li brary is part of the cultural devel opment of the city, but he would not pull funds from one area to finance the new building. Hachtman says the new library, if constructed, should specialize in one particular field so as not to duplicate services provided by A&M’s library. Hachtman also says the money from the overcharges should be given back to consumers. Tongco says the money from the overcharges wouldn’t be enough to start the library and any proposal for it should co-operate with Bryan’s public library system. James Bond, an attorney, and Jim Gardner, a councilman from 1974- 78, are running for Place 5, cur rently occupied by Gary Anderson. Bond says he wants to improve intra- governmental cooperation to acheive common purposes and make sure government officials ask the right questions about issues. Gard ner says he wants to optimize bene fits from the area’s growth, strengthen the planning function in the city and have a thorough review done on the city’s industrial park. Bond says he had not studied the library issue and Gardner says he is glad the voters are participating in the decision-making process. Studenfs campaign irritates Mayor Halter By MICHAEL CRAWFORD Stuff Writer All is not well in electionland. With less than a week remain ing before the April 6 city council and school board elections, Mike Hachtman’s campaign for a coun cil seat has irritated College Sta tion Mayor Gary Halter. “I do know that he is trying to portray me as anti-student,” Hal ter said last week. “I have told him that I do not appreciate him impugning my reputation in or der to gain some sort of advanta ge-” Although Halter would not give examples of how Hachtman was portraying him as anti-stu dent, Hachtman said the problem surrounds a quote reported in the Houston Chronicle. In a March 3 article of the Chronicle, Halter is quoted as saying: “They’re (students) like the lo custs that disappear for four years and reappear to vote in na tional elections.” In the article, Halter went on to say that stu dents don’t get involved in local politics. Halter’s student/locust compa rison has been used by Hachtman in his campaign for the unoccu pied Place 3 seat. Hachtman said he is not trying to portray the mayor as anti-stu dent. Hachtman said, “We want to show the community we’re not locusts and that we do care about what’s going on here, so we will get out and vote.” Hachtman is counting on a large student turnout to bring him victory, but traditionally stu dents have largely ignored local elections. On Wednesday, Hachtman apologized to Halter, but main- See Hachtman, page 5 the consolidation is justified.’ ” Since the last city election, voter registration in those precincts has in creased 230 percent, and the space available for use has been reduced to one-third of its original size. Also, an A&M student is running for a seat on the council in this election. Those changes, Bowers said, makes the continued use of the consolidated precincts unacceptable. Gollege Station Mayor Gary Hal ter said last week that the distance to the voting place is not excessive. “I don’t think it’s any more to ask a student whose interested in the city — and I think students should be — to go a distance slightly greater than the Dixie Chicken to vote, than it is, for example, for a non-student resi dent to go from the other side of the bypass all the way to the municipal court building,” Halter said. While Bowers doubts the Justice Department will act on the petition before the election, he said in the E ast the results from elections have een discarded when the procedure used was unfair. The petition re quests “expedited consideration.” The city may have to worry about more than the Justice Department. The Texas Civil Liberties Union, Bowers said, will decide early this week on whether to sue the city and the school district for infringement of voters’ civil rights. The lawsuit- would be based on the information submitted to the Justice Depart ment. The consolidation may be inten tionally inconvenient for students, Bowers said, and he blames the poor attitude of city officials for the changes. “I don’t like this conclusion,” Bowers said, “but it’s the only con clusion there can be. ... I would have to blame the poor attitude of the officials . . . I’m not saying every body in College Station or that even many people in College Station have a poor attitude about students, but I think there are a few elected officials that do. These officials are dividing the ‘regular people’ and the stu dents. I think that’s unfortunate.” Bowers includes Halter among those officials who, he said, are try ing to intimidate students.