Battalion Vol. 74 No. 50 |14 Pages Serving the Texas A&M University community Tuesday, November 10, 1981 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 The Weather High . . Today 67 Tomorrow High . . . 68 Low. . . . . . 43 Low . . . 45 Chance* of rain 10% Chance of rain . 10% aber-wielder isuspended; no MU charges By DENISE RICHTER Buttalion Staff "Greg Hood lias bccMi suspcMicIed from University until the end of the Jmester for brandishing a saber at the |exas A&M-Southern Methodist Uni- l;rsity game. SMU cheerleaders say 0 Bey will not press charges against the • Bilet. n| | “Ifeel like he and A&M have been Bgraced enough,” SMU Head Cheer- Jadcr David Schmidt said Monday Beht. "As long as he regrets what he s , that’s enough. I don’t want to rub It in his wounds. Last week, Schmidt said the eheer- jaders would wait until Texas A&M ik disciplinary action against Hood fore they decided whether to press aiges. The decision to suspend Hood was ladled Monday after a 3'/•’-hour closed aring, chaired by University Adini- strative Officer William L. Kibler. I Hood had been charged with assault- Jg SMU students, improperly using a s at home. ftaP 011 an d creating a disturbance, a 4-6 re(J>ss$le punishment ranged from ac he second-W'ittal to expulsion. Marc Wil J After the hearing. Hood said: "Look- ) a 6-point LilS the University. I felt (the suspen- m) was a relatively fair position. Hav- |g the positions I’ve had, I understand ire of the broader concerns that go to making the decision. My main con- n is to do what s best for the Univer- ;d byeompIBty,” ■ Before his suspension. Hood serv ed > an d was rB the chairman of the Student Govern- careerivlnB L . n t Judicial Board and was a member larterhack VCadet Court and the Traffic Appeals ta of the NFIjuurt. He has three class days to file an meal with the University Disciplinary meals Panel. But, he saiil Monday as a must else he -• forced to a last seasona lad almost li Super BowlSj i-5 record I specially si hdowntoti , was coni inipleted oil] night that he does not plan to file an appeal at this time. I lood will be able to re-apply for admission to the University in January. However, re-admission is not guaran teed. “What a student is given at the time of suspension is a guarantee that his case will be reviewed,” Kibler said. Concerning the courses that Hood was taking this semester, Kibler said he will receive grades of “withdrew pas sing or “withdrew failing. “A suspension does the same thing that withdrawing does,” Kibler said, “but a notation (concerning the suspen sion) goes on the student’s permanent record.” Hood said the suspension will delay his graduation by a semester. He said he had planned to graduate in May but now will graduate in August or December. "I do, most definitely, plan to return (to Texas A&M),’ he said. “This is my school and I plan to graduate from here. “I still feel the same love that I always have for the University ... the decision has no effect on my feelings toward the University, the administration or the way we conduct things down here. The incident occurred Oct. 31 in front of more than 62,()()() fans after the SMU Mustangs scored a touchdown in the second quarter. The male cheer leaders ran onto the field to spell out S-M-U with their bodies. Hood, who was standing on the side lines as an officer of the day, drew his saber as he ran onto the field to order the cheerleaders off . He was tackled by Schmidt but jumped up again. As Schmidt again grabbed Hood s legs, the cadet kicked another cheer leader. However, no one was injured. riday fatality second onfire-related death Vomen s in Bowl beating latch. »r from mentary Vomen s ampion' ;i in the Monday i was by fa ing. Intfal ght, Watctl Team by* ik or St ampion Shots. Wiley Keith Jopling was not the first mlent to he killed in a bonfire-related ident. In 1955, cadet James Eduard Sarran as struck and killed by a ear on the old igliway 6, now Wellborn road, when pushed another student out of the ath of an on-coming ear. Sarran. 18, ad been standing watch at the bonfire ite, which at that time was on the main drill field. The Texas A&M student body dedi- |ed the Texas A&M-University of ms football game to the cadet that Col. Joe E. Davis, then commander hIcCorps, said Sarran s death was the bt bonfire-related fatality. Jopling, 19, a sophomore agricultural momies major, died Friday night af- |rhe was crushed beneath the rear tire a tractor. He and two other students we taking the tractor to the bonfire sitting site on Old San Antonio Road 'hen Jopling fell off its rear fender. Trooper Bill Kuhnle, of the Depart ment of.Public Safety, said Monday that the student s death is still being investi gated . Director of Student Affairs Ron Blatchley said he will meet with the bonfire committee informally tonight to check on the bonfire s progress and to discuss whether any additional precau tions need to be taken at the cutting site. However, he said he did not have any specific changes in mind and absolved bonfire coordinators for Friday’s acci dent. “When you’ve got a project as big as bonfire with as many students involved as you do in bonfire, you’ve got to count on ... people to use good common sense and not to do careless things, ” Blatchley said. “No one could possibly monitor all that might happen,” he said. Blatchley said, however, that he will still continue to consider suggestions for making bonfire safer. fSenate Republicans peddle budget i) righ t: nksiek ey an(f United Press International WASHINGTON — Senate Republi cans are making a final pitch for Presi- Career Center alters hours Wednesday The Texas A&M Career Planning and Placement Center announced Monday (bat it will be closing its office three hours earlier beginning Wednesday. The office will be open from 8 a. m. to Span. Previously it was open until 8 p.m. Placement Center Night Supervisor Jay Wheeler said students primarily used the center’s evening hours to sign up for interviews since the office is usually less busy at that time than dur ing the day. Interviews are conducted from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The center schedules interviews for students with prospective employers. Students may sign up for interviews up to two weeks in advance but no later than one day before the interview. Students who basked in the sun last week are bundled up in thick winter clothes this week. The cooler part of the fall season may have finally arrived to stay. Bonfire, intramurals on Duncan field Saudi Arabia chases away Israeli jets United Press International JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Arabia demonstrated its growing aerial might by intercepting and forcing back Israeli warplanes that had penetrated up to 100 miles inside Saudi airspace on the eve of a defense meeting today of Arab Gulf states. Israeli jets reportedly cross into the desert kingdom on training and surveill ance flights frequently, but Saudi Ara bia took the unusual step of pursuing them Monday and publicizing the viola tion for the first time. / . Israel refused comment. Crown Prince Fahd briefed the Saudi cabinet on the incident in adv ance of today’s summit of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, which is meeting to study plans for joint regional defense, Riyadh Radio said. Summit sources said the Israeli viola tion highlighted the need for the six nations to study strategies for regional defense, without involvement by the superpowers. White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes urged restraint, saying: “We urge all parties to avoid any actions that tend to raise tensions in the area. ” Israel has stepped up its denuncia tion of Saudi Arabia recently following U.S approval of the sale of A WAGS radar planes to Riyadh and international recognition of a plan proposed by Fahd as a substitute for the 1978 Camp David peace accords between Israel and Egypt. “Israeli warplanes violated our airs pace in the northwestern sector of the kingdom, a Saudi military statement said. “Our planes intercepted the enemy planes and forced them out of our airspace. The Saudis gave no further details. They did not say if shots were fired nor what kind of planes were involved. In Washington, administration offi cials said Israeli planes violated Saudi air space twice during the day. The officals said the Israeli planes flew up to TOO miles.aeros^the border, skirting the Saudi airbase at Tabuk. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who last week said the “darkness of the Middle Ages reigns in Saudi Ara bia, has said Fahd’s peace plan is aimed at Israel’s “liquidation and added Mon day it had no chance of succeeding. Building not to disturb activities dent Reagan’s support of controversial austerity measures which they say could balance the budget by 1984 — a goal Reagan recently shelved. The new plan totals $163 billion in budget cuts and tax hikes over three years, including $27 billion in defense spending reductions, $48 billion in tax increases, $40 billion in cuts in entitle ment programs such as welfare, Medi care and food stamps, and $33 billion in other domestic spending. It was presented Monday to Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, budget dire ctor David Stockman, White House chief of staff James Baker and congres sional liaison Max Friedersdorf at a Capitol Hill meeting. President Reagan said last week the goal of a balanced budget was no longer in reach because of deteriorating econo mic conditions. Sources said the admi nistration team was “cool” to the idea because they feared rejection by the Democratic-dominated House. Earlier, Regan said balancing the budget was only fourth on the list of White House priorities after the need to cut back the size of government, pass tax cuts and strengthen the country’s defense. By NANCY FLOECK Battalion Staff The Texas A&M University Press building, planned for construction on Duncan field, will not interfere with bonfire or intramurals, University offi cials say. Yet, some Texas A&M stu dents and staff members disagree. Construction of the 24, ()()()-square- foot building is scheduled to begin March 1. Paul Stephens, manager of facilities and planning, said it will be on the east corner of the field behind Duncan Di ning Hall, by Lewis Street and parking annex 40. “That’s a steep slope area and not good for athletics,” he said. “But it does give the proper access desired for the press building.” After reviewing the plans last week, Dennis Corrington, director of intra murals, said although the location won’t directly interfere with sports, it will cre ate problems. Playing room on the field will be tight, especially during construction, he said. Balls from intramural sports could be lost around the area and others could break windows or cause other damage, he said. T’d rather it not be there,” he said, “but that’s a personal feeling.” Similiar sentiments have been ex pressed by the the Student Senate. The Senate passed a bill Wednesday night recommending that an alternate site be found for the building. Furthermore, it recommends that no future construc tion on Duncan field be considered be cause of the possibility of jeopardizing intramurals and bonfire. Stephens said that plans call for the University Press building to be con structed a safe distance from where bon fire is usually located. However, he said he does not know exactly what that dis tance will be. A1 Link, junior head civilian (for bon fire) and student senator, agreed that bonfire probably could be continued at its traditional site if the building is con structed, but he expressed concern that the University Press will start a prece dent. “We think it would open the door for future construction,” he said, “and that’s what scares us.” Additional buildings on the field would cause bonfire to be moved off- Awaiting construction of a new building proposed for Duncan field, the University Press is Staff photo by Dave Einsci currently housed in several trailers located north of Hotard Hall, behind the Northgate Post Office. campus, which would hurt participa tion, Link said. Student Body President Ken John son said students probably also are con cerned that the remaining grassy areas on campus will be destroyed by con struction. Johnson recommended that sites on the University’s west campus be recons idered. The site on Duncan field was approved last spring by the Texas A&M System Board of Regents, based on a recommendation of the regents’ plan ning and building committee. Regent Clyde H. Wells of Granbury said Duncan field and two other sites on Texas A&M’s west campus were consi dered for the University Press; howev er, Duncan field was chosen because of its proximity to the Sterling C. Evans Library, the post offices and the acade mic departments that work with the press. University Press employees are ea ger to be on the main campus because of these advantages, he said. Wells said the regents probably would consider changing the location, but that such a request would have to show “strong advantages for such a proposal. ” ' 1 Noel Parsons, editor of the press, said changing the building’s site to the west campus would inconvenience press em ployees, who need access to faculty and the library for research. Robert Boyce, chief architect in faci lities and planning, said, “The building was tailored to the site the board chose (but) in my opinion, it could be site adapted. Changing locations would mean a construction delay of about two months, Boyce .said. Estimates of the costs in volved in such a move aren t available, since it would depend on the site chosen, he said. The University Press originally was located in the old Board of Directors Building — the present site of Hobby and Neeley halls. But, it was destroyed by fire in 1979. Since then, the press has been operating out of mobile trailers on Asbury Street.