Bike-related complaints. increase e Bengali urt of md erronet if it had ii ihe streel. - the Beiial d the appeal that a foot! .mother plan :al contact ns. foreseeabled reals’ decisioi profession engaging ii iolenee t the game,’! Top 1 By LAURA CORTEZ Battalion Reporter The sound of screeching bicycle brakes has become one of the most dreaded sounds on the Texas A&M University campus. As the number of students attending the University increases, so does the number of bicycles — and bicycle-related acci dents. George D. Parker III, chairman of the University traffic panel, said he is receiv ing more complaints now than during pre vious years from students, faculty and staff who are fed up with having to dodge bicy cles on campus sidewalks. And Dr. C.B. Goswick, director of stu dent health services, said he receives more patients than ever before who have been involved in this type of accident. “We treat maybe a dozen people a day for injuries caused by bicycle-related acci dents,” he said. Most of the accidents patients are treated for at the health center are head- on or side-to-side bicycle collisions involv ing bicycles and automobiles or bicycles and pedestrians, Goswick said. He said that although the most of the injuries are minor, such as cuts, bruises and gravel embedded in the skin, some have involved broken bones. Parker, who said he volunteered to serve on the traffic panel three years ago after having been hit from behind and knocked to the ground by a speeding bicy cle, referred to the current situation as “horrible. ” He said the main reason for the problem is simply that there are more bicycles on campus now than ever before. Parker said he believes “bikes have been on campus forever,” but said 1973 was a boom year for them. “In 1973, due to the energy crisis, bicy cles were really pushed by the University because they serve a darn good purpose. Parking fees were doubled in the hopes that there would be less cars and more bikes on campus, ” he said. Although the Texas Motor Vehicles Laws specifies that bicycles are to be rid den only in bicycle paths and on roadways, Parker said the University allows them on sidewalks and in the mall areas. “I imagine we’ve just looked the other way as far as this is concerned,” he said. Although it is the responsibility of the traffic panel, which is made up of students, faculty and staff, to make recom mendations concerning traffic regulations to the vice president for student services, it is the responsibility of the University Police to enforce these regulations. “We realize that it is a dangerous situa tion,” Police Chief Russ McDonald said, “but there’s not a lot we can do about it.” Although bicycles are considered vehi cles and must adhere to the same rules which pertain to cars, bicyclists seem to consider the themselves pedestrians, McDonald said. He gave an example in which a student rode a bike across a pedestrian crosswalk and was struck by a car. “A bicycle has no rights when in a pedestrian crosswalk; therefore the stu dent on the bike was wrong,” he said. Had the student gotten off the bike and walked it across, then the pedestrian rights would have applied to him, he said. Capt. Elmer Schneider of the Univer sity Police said when operating in the mall areas and on sidewalks, bicycles should travel at a safe speed, ride single file in with the traffic flow, stop at all stop signs and yield to all motor vehicles at intersec tions or other traffic junctures where no stop sign or other traffic control sign or signal is posted. And most importantly, they must give the right-of-way to pedest rian traffic at all times. He said in areas where bike lanes or bike paths are available, bicycles are pro hibited from riding in mall areas and on sidewalks. There are also problems with bicycles being parked where they are prohibited. Schneider said many people park their bikes in areas which obstruct the normal flow of traffic, such as in doorways, pas sageways and ramps for the disabled. “This is a very dangerous situation if a building has to be evacuated,” Schneider said. “These ramps are not bicycle ramps. They were placed there for the handicap ped and not for the use bicycles.” But both Schneider and McDonald agree that enforcement of bicycle regu lations is difficult because it is almost im possible to catch the offenders. An officer on foot or in a car usually can not catch a bicycle — it can easily cut be tween buildings and get away, McDonald said. He said it is almost useless to give tick ets to parked bicycles because few stu dents register their bikes with the Univer sity. But McDonald said citations for moving violations are occasionally issued to bicycle riders caught breaking the rules. The officer also has the right to issue a Justice of the Peace citation if he feels that the situation merits being recorded on the violator’s permanent driving record (such as in the case of a serious accident.) Parker said he could see the banning of bicycles from University mall areas and sidewalks if the problem continues to get worse. “How could we really enforce some thing like that, though?” he said. “It’s going to have to be a self-policing type thing.” Aw, Mom! /ith Halloween here, buying a suitable costume for trick-or-treating is a matter of pressing importance. Tammy Burgess stands impatiently as her mother, Mrs. Faye Burgess, passes judgment on the fit of Tammy’s Bugs Bunny costume. BaUalion photo by Sam Stroder Korean presidential aide arrested in connection with assassination Press Inlerml IK-The U Board of 0 hotball rati! ites and vrosi itheses (eijfc »):M federal judge appointed s 1st education secretary 1 (8-0) 0(7-0) Cal (1) ite Young h me rest rolina United Press International WASHINGTON — Shirley Hufstedler, 4, a Los Angeles federal appeals court udge, has been chosen by President Car er to become the first secretary of the ifepartment of Education. The appoint ment was approved Tuesday. Ipften mentioned for posts in several Democratic administrations, Hufstedler said Monday, “I have intense concern jabout the quality of education for all jiericans, particularly those in primary p secondary schools. 11 have devoted a great deal of my life to ffiucation and have a great commitment to education,” she said, adding she must gm more about the agency before decid- gwhat ideas to promote. Created by Congress at the request of Earter, the department was formed from the Department of Health, Education and elfare. HEW becomes the Department nhanHIf °- health and Human Services. The new nnariu agency takes effect in about five months. JOWn Cili« u ^ te dl er became a state superior , |ourt judge in 1961, and was named as an [fliZaMfsociate justice of the state Court of Ap- l r a * s * n 1966. Two years later. President leenny l,yndon B. Johnson appointed her to a qfl 7;|)IS. Circuit Court vacancy. In 1970 she ' was named to the 9th Circuit Court of Ap- 504 RUfll* Hals. She holds a law degree from Stan- e lei . > ford University. Her name has surfaced as a candidate to become the first woman on the U. S. Su preme Court, but she said Monday her commitment was “to put every bit of energy into trying to achieve the adminis tration’s objectives in education. “That’s enough to do without worrying about a job I might have if it is to offered, which is something that hasn’t occurred.” While a number of persons were men tioned for the job, the list was cut to five names and finally to the judge and former New Mexico Gov. Jerry Apodaca. One source said Carter was dissatisfied with Apodaca, a Democrat, after a meet ing in which they discussed the new de partment’s role. The Los Angeles Times quoted an un identified Carter campaign official as say ing the White House got “very positive feedback” on choosing Hufstedler from the Southern California liberal Democrat establishment. “Her liberal decisions over the years have been popular among civil rights types — blacks, other minorities and women — that make up the Democratic consti tuency, and they are likely to be pleased by the appointment,” the campaign source said. United Press International SEOUL, South Korea — Army inves tigators arrested a top presidential aide who escaped unhurt from President Park Chung-hee’s assassination and dozens of other officials also suspected of being in volved, sources close to the investigation said Tuesday. The arrests suggested far wider in volvement in the slaying than originally suspected. The Martial Law Command announced the arrest of Park’s chief secretary, who was the fourth man seated at a dinner table with Park when intelligence chief Kim Jae-Kyu opened fire with a pistol on Fri day, killing Park and a bodyguard. Agents of Kim’s Korean CIA, allegedly acting on his orders, then killed four other presidential bodyguards and wounded a fifth. There was no official announcement about the other arrests, but the sources placed the number of suspects in deten tion at between 30 and 50. Most, if not all, are senior members of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, the sources said. In a related development, other sources said Kim left the KCIA annex where the slayings took place and met with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Chung SungHwa. The sources said Kim and Chung then met with top cabinet officials before the intelligence chief was finally arrested, hours after the murder of Park and five bodyguards. In other developments: — Acting President Choi Kyuhah named an acting KCIA head and held what will become a daily meeting to discuss internal and external security matters and the nation’s economy, actions seen as at tempts to show Choi’s control of the post assassination situation. — U.S. Ambassador to Korea William Gleysteen labeled as “baloney and rub bish” a report by communist Nort Korea’s official radio that Gleysteen met Kim Jae- kyu shortly before the assassination. — U.S. officials said Washington has “a very major interest in seeing this thing hang together, for security reasons, for economic reasons” and hopes whatever Seoul government emerges from the post-assassination crisis is as broadly based as possible. Earlier in the day, Choi named Lt. Gen. Lee Hui-sung, 55, acting director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency. In the waters off Korea, a U.S. Navy task force led by an aircraft carrier pa trolled the sea in a signal to communist North Korea not to take any actions against the south, where martial law is in force. Gen. Chung Sung-hwa, the commander responsible for enforcing the country’s martial law, said in a statement his forces will do their best to strengthen defenses against communist North Korea, maintain order at home and take all measures needed to assure smooth daily life for the nation. Law requires jail for Torres felony Civil rights violators resentenced United Press International HOUSTON — A federal judge, acting under an appeals court order forbidding probation, Tuesday resentenced three former policemen to a year and a day in prison for felony civil rights violations in the drowning of a Mexican-American pris oner. Originally, the judge had ordered the three former officers placed on probation for conviction on the felony civil rights charge. U. S. District Judge Ross Sterling or dered the sentences to run concurrently with one-year sentences he gave them for misdemeanor civil rights violations in the May 5, 1977 death of Joe Campos Torres. On Oct. 4, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals told Sterling the law required that Terry Denson, 29, Steven Orlando, 24, and Joseph Janish, 25, spend some time in prison for the felony violations. Sterling rejected an appeal by Justice Department civil rights lawyer Brian McDonald for “substantial periods of in carceration,” which McDonald argued would help prevent future police violations of civil rights. In effect. Sterling ordered the defen dants to spend an additional day in prison beyond the sentence they already had re ceived. In March 1978, Sterling sentenced the three, convicted by a jury of misdemeanor and felony civil rights violations, to one year in prison for the misdemeanor. He gave a 10-year suspended sentence in lieu of five years probation for the felony. Federal prosecutors appealed only the felony sentencing and the New Orleans appeals court ruled Sterling acted illegally in granting suspended sentences and pro bation for a felony civil rights violation ending in the victim’s death. Torres, 23, was found floating in Buffalo Bayou downtown on May 8, 1977. Investi gation disclosed he had been arrested three days earlier on an intoxication com plaint. The three were convicted with the aid of testimony from other officers granted im munity or allowed to plead guilty to lesser violations. All of the defense attorneys indicated the sentences would not be appealed and speculated none of the defendants would have to spend a full year in prison. They said they did not know when the defendants would surrender to federal au thorities to start their prison terms. -with =a lculatof ^•arn ■cries. are r-ieswitH sster Memory seven \ -vvf '".IT •' "'V • ' I I ■ - \ Parties are OK, I spooks are out! Joshua Constanzo, 4, seemed a I little uneasy as he and Texas A&M University sophomore Kathy Bruinooge discussed a visit to the “Haunted House” at the Hospitality Committee’s Hallo ween party for youngsters Tues day (right). He convinced Kathy ||(far right) he really wasn’t in- I terested in visiting any ghosts l after all. See story, page 4. Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. ^ --y