Vet school clinic serves area animals See page 3 Aggies sweep over Gents in Tuesday’s double-header See page 17 .32 i me Dottoiion Serving the University community 75 No. 108 USPS 045360 20 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 3, 1982 Iternative budget ears completion United Press International ^SHINGTON — The Senate leadership hopes to complete veek a draft of a comprehensive, tit-reducing alternative to Presi- Reagan’s embattled budget [josal for fiscal 1983, a spokesman he package could include any of tral options to reduce Reagan’s ected $91.5 billion deficit, includ- tax hikes, more spending cuts for dement programs and reduced ense spending, said Senate Re- ilican Leader Howard Baker’s ss secretary, Tom Griscom. “Nothing is final yet,” he said :sday, although adding none of the options frequently mentioned have been ruled out either. As an indication of what might be expected in the draft, however, he noted Baker has indicated he believes $5 billion to $10 billion could be re moved from Reagan’s proposed $263 billion defense budget. Griscom also noted Reagan is ada mant about keeping intact the 10 per cent personal income tax cuts sche duled for this July and for July 1983. The compromise is being put together by Chairmen Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., of the Senate Appropriations Committee; Bob Dole, R-Kan., of the Senate Finance Committee; and Peter Domenici, R-N.M., of the Senate Budget Committee. The tax-writing Senate Finance Committee voted, 14-3, to send the Budget Committee a letter endorsing the deficit-reduction figures in Reagan’s budget as a minimum goal, rather than making specific recom mendations on each item in the budget under its jurisdiction. The procedural vote by which the committee signaled its approval of Reagan’s deficit-reduction figure in dicated the panel will work to reduce the 1983 deficit by at least as much as Reagan proposed and maybe more, a staff member said. #r^ dorticulture, profits aid landicapped in project llA Spring cleaning? photo by Christine Mallon With brasso in hand, four Company F-2 freshman spend their Tuesday afternoon giving “Sully,” Lawrence Sullivan Ross, a spring shining. Freshman cadets such as Allan White, John Sottile, Cary Wortham and John Cartwright, (left to right) keep the statue in good condition throughout the year. by Michael Larkin Battalion Reporter i love of plants mixed with a desire human contact, has resulted in a il program to aid the hand- aped. Geranium Junction, located on S. liege Avenue, supervises hand led employees who will grow nts in a special greenhouse de- ned to accommodate wheel chairs. Temporarily operating out of a iverted gas station, the program nds horticulture and profits and o may eliminate handicapped per is’dependence on federal aid, said tricia S. Barksdale, a 1976 Texas icM floriculture graduate who be- n the program. She embarked on the project be- se she knew she wanted to work h plants but didn’t want to be seel up in a greenhouse, she said. “I still wanted the contact with the ople,” she said. “(These people) are izens of the community. While Geranium Junction will con- ntrate mainly on selling plants olesale, Barksdale said the busi- ss also will do some retailing. “The whole success of this program pends upon it being profitable. “We are a non-profit organization ose goal is to provide jobs for se- rely handicapped people, while at e same time producifig a market- le item.” Although most aid programs in the untry rely heavily on government nding, Barksdale said she plans to ake her program self-sufficient. Currently, 70 percent of the fund- ig for Geranium Junction comes om the Texas Rehabilitation Com- iiission. Barksdale relies mainly on help ^om volunteers in the community. While there are no legal ties be- veen Geranium Junction and the Jniversity, she said, various profes- ars and student organizations are ac- Ively involved with the project. Nine handicapped people work at cranium Junction, putting in a six- kour day, five days a week. WM / // Haig says Nicaragua aiding leftist guerrillas ,/j pr United Press International WASHINGTON — The United States says it now has “overwhelming and irrefutable” evidence El Salva dor’s leftist guerrillas are under fore ign control and a key senator says the CIA pointed the finger at Nicaragua. “The operations of the guerrilla forces in El Salvador are controlled from external command and con trol,” Secretary of State Alexander Haig told the House Foreign Affairs Committee Tuesday. Haig did not say what country was manipulating the guerrillas, but Sen ate Intelligence Committee Chair man Barry Goldwatef, R-Ariz., re ported a secret CIA briefing on Cen tral America last Thursday showed Nicaragua plays a direct role in the insurgency in El Salvador. “The briefing left no doubt there is active involvement by Sandinista gov ernment officials in support of the Salvadoran guerrilla movement,” Gold water said in a statement issued shortly after Haig’s testimony. Both Haig and Goldwater declined to provide specific details. Haig warned disclosure would jeopardize intelligence sources while Goldwater said the details of the CIA briefing must remain secret. Goldwater said the CIA provided evidence Nicaragua’s support “in cludes arrangements for the use of Nicaraguan territory for the move ment of arms and munitions to guer rillas in El Salvador.” He said it also includes “the con tinuing passage of guerrillas in and out of Nicaragua for advanced train ing in sabotage and other terrorist tactics and the presence of high-level guerrilla headquarters elements in Nicaragua.” Gasoline prices may drop 10 cents Oil glut hurts OPEC A? photo by Karen Kaley Gary Webb fixes plant racks of an abandoned nursery while Troy Amerson looks on. Both are involved in the Geranium Junction workshop project on S. College Avenue. The Texas Rehabilitation Commis- responsible for obtaining a v sion handicappe' workers for the project. The program will be housed at its present location for only six months, until Barksdale can obtain a perma nent location where the new green house can be built. Wide aisles, ramps and waist-high benches will facilitate work. Hand icapped workers grow and maintain the plants, prune them, transplant them and sell them. United Press International Britain slashed the price of North Sea oil $4 a barrel, Iran has turned to selling its national treasures and de sperate OPEC members want an emergency meeting to halt what one analyst calls the unraveling of the oil cartel. But bad news for producers is good news for American consumers: the world oil glut could mean as much as a further 10-cent-per-gallon drop in the price of gasoline. Britain, America’s second largest oil supplier, became the latest expor ter to buckle under to the global oil glut when it cut crude prices Tuesday $4 a barrel. It already had trimmed prices $1.50 to $35 a barrel Feb. 9. That lowered North Sea crude $3 below OPEC’s base price of $34 a bar rel. But the 13 nations of OPEC also have been been cutting prices and some analysts believe its base price should sink to $26. “We are witnessing the unraveling of OPEC,” said William Randol, a senior oil analyst at First Boston Corp. in New York. “Unless OPEC can agree on some production curtail ment, OPEC has a real problem con trolling the world oil market.” Analysts estimated the latest Brit ish price could save U.S. motorists ab out 3 cents a gallon. But a Cornell University economist said the current glut will cut gasoline prices 10 cents a gallon by summer. “The major factors in determining how low the prices will eventually go are American consumption levels and the degree to which the OPEC coun tries are able to hold their monopoly together,” Duane Chapman said. “Gasoline prices will go down 10 cents a gallon and might go as low as $1 a gallon.” The current oversupply of oil, de creased consumption and a reluct ance by oil companies to keep big in ventories at high interest rates already have lowered U.S. prices ab out 10 cents a gallon. Power fails in Bryan A short in a power line was probably the cause of a one- hour power outage that affected 500 to 600 homes and a televi sion station in Bryan Tuesday night, a spokesman for the Bryan utility said this morning. Kyle Kuntz, assistant super intendent of Bryan Utilities’ light department, said a fire on an electrical pole was probably started by some of the wires coming into contact. He said the area served by the line had to be cut off from power until the damage could be repaired. The area affected was around 29th Street, Rosemary and Carter Creek; Kuntz said the customers hit by the outage were mostly residential. Chancellor gets on board of Blocker Energy Corp. by Dennis Prescott Battalion Reporter Dr. Frank W.R. Hubert, Texas A&M System chancellor, has been elected to fill a vacancy on the Board of Directors of Blocker Energy Cor poration. Blocker Energy is a worldwide drilling contractor presently operat ing 54 oil rigs in the United States, Canada, Africa and Latin America. The company also has domestic ex ploration and production operations in 10 states. John R. Blocker, vice chairman of the Texas A&M System Board of Re gents, is chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the com pany. Alan Payne, manager of public re lations for the company, said Hubert would begin serving as a director im mediately. Hubert has served at Texas A&M since 1959, first as dean of the College of Liberal Arts and dean of the Col lege of Education, which he helped establish. He has served as chancellor since Oct. 1, 1979 and will retire from that position Aug. 31. Hubert is a former president of the Association of Texas Colleges and Universities and is a past president of the board of directors of the National Regional Educational Laboratory for Louisiana and Texas. He presently serves as president and chairman of the board of the Corporation for .Re search and Engineering of Bryan, a private consulting firm. Board of Regents to meet on building expansions An appropriadon for the Halbou- ty Geosciences Building expansion design and bids for the Transporta tion Center expansion wall be among the items discussed at today’s commit tee meeting of the Texas A&M Sys tem Board of Regents. The Planning and Building Commit tee will meet at 4:30 pm. in the meet ing room of the MSC regents annex. The meedng is expected to adjourn at 1:30 p.m. Thursday. The Committee for Service Units is scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. Thurs day. The committee will meet jointly with the Planning and Building Com mittee to hear a report concerning forestry programs of the Texas Forest Service. Both committees will discuss items on the agenda for the March 23 meet ing of the Board of Regents. In September, the Board appropri ated $100,000 for the design of the Halbouty Building expansion and is requesting $235,000 for the detailed design. This 40,000-square-foot addi tion to the geosciences building will cost an estimated $7 million. The $1.3 million addition to the Transportation Center will provide service and maintenance areas, park ing space for 34 buses and space for future expansion. inside Classified 14 Local 3 National 6 Opinions 2 Sports 17 State 4 What’s Up 6 forecast Today’s forecast: MosUy cloudy and mild with a high in the mid- 70s; low in the mid-50s. Thursday’s forecast calls for partly cloudy skies and mild temperatures.