Cyclones become Ags' season opener ><$ at 7 Kate at g. at 7:30 ajors are Ider fo r hursday •i forma. f Metal” ng at 7 Parsons' Cavalry active in fund raising Corrington tackles grades and receivers See page 6 See page 10 Texas ASM V • The Battalion Serving the University community der. Sol 80 ho. 17 GSRS 045360 16 pages dections ■' "" " College Station, Texas Friday, September 21,1984 isketball ■hristian kTION: ie mini. the ac- piesen- V: is ac- 3. Com- lish de- eting at ENGI- >11. The daily at y. Any- a.m. in nb. ing for noring it Cen- udder. o.m. in . . Photo by FRANK IR WIN Hang on... Mike Pfeuffer, a junior electrical engineering major from studies student, in righting himself during the Outdoor Rec- New Braunfels, assists Erik Adams, a sophomore general reation Committee’s kayak roll session at Wofford Cain Pool. —— Student killed in car accident By ROBIN BLACK Senior Staff Writer One Texas A&M University stu dent was killed and another injured Thursday night in College Station when their car was struck by a train. The women’i car, a brown Volvo, was travelling east on W. Luther Street shortly before 9 p.m. when it crossed the railroad tracks and was hit broadside by a Southern Pacific freight train, College Station police said. Police said the car was dragged about 100 feet after the collision. The passenger was pronounced dead at the scene and the driver, a 22-year-old woman, was taken to St. Joseph Hospital in Bryan. This morning she was listed in stable con dition with a fractured collarbone. Police have not yet released the names of either women, pending no tification of the families. Two Texas A&M student identifi cation cards were found in the Volvo, and the car had a blue Uni versity student parking sticker on it. “The women were eastbound on Luther near Wellborn Road and ap parently did not see the train com ing, crossed the tracks and were hit broadside by the train,” College Sta tion police Lt. Greg Lewis said. There are no warning lights or safety gates at the crossing on Lu ther Street, which is just south of Jersey Street in College Station. There is no lighting near the inter section, and the only railroad cross ing sign is almost completely obscured by trees. No alcohol was found in the car and was not a factor in the accident, police said. Sergeant William Stark of the Col lege Station Police Department is conducting an investigation of the accident. habbat ie role Lebanon Pro-Iranian terrorists bomb U.S. Embassy ie miliuty in receii! /ing fault!' design de ughessaid ill happc” 've got i* ’ Cressal ;en right it therein United Press International ‘n BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two pro- _ a Irmian terrorists drove a truck- bomb through a hail of bullets to the IW U S. Embassy Thursday and set off a hi ?eexplosion that killed 2S people, — ■eluding two American servicemen, 11 and dug a crater 9-feet deep. ft H Police set the overall toll at 23 d( ad and 71 injured in the attack — “i Jthe third against an American instal- 1 lanon in Beirut in 17 months. At feast 20 other people were reported • 0 trussing, rescue officials said. State- ,1 ‘j 1 nin Beirut radio said the death toll 101 . i j could rise to 40 as rescuers searched 111(1 in “trough the rubble. U.S. Ambassador Reginald Bar- (rolomew, 48, was among 25 Ameri- ns injured. He was pinned under tbble in his 4th floor office and ex- icated by British Ambassador Da- fid Miers, who was visiting him, wit- esses said. Bartholomew’s injuries ere described as minor. The Pentagon said the two serv- cemen killed were Army Chief War- Officer Kenneth W. Welch, 33, If Grand Rapids, Mich., and Petty )fficer 1st Class Michael Ray Wag- ler,30,of Zebulon, N.C. nhes’onll t Cressal with tltf ssible sale President Reagan was awakened it 5:50 a.m. and informed of the al ack. He called the bombing a “pain- ul reminder” of a worldwide terror- st network. gypt anl countries sibility O' said. The Islamic Jihad organization, a aro-Iranian underground novement bent on pushing “the last \merican out of Lebanon,” claimed esponsibility for the blast in a tele phone call to a Western news agency. “We fulfill our promise,” the caller said. “Not a single American will stay on Lebanese soil.” Two weeks ago, a person identify ing himself as a spokesman for the Islamic Jihad warned of an attack on a U.S. installation. The estimated 330 pounds of TNT in the truck detonated just 20 feet short of the six-story embassy building, near a crowd that gathered at the visa section. The embassy was damaged but none of its walls col lapsed. A State Department official said the dead included four or five Leb anese employees of the embassy. Three other American service men were wounded and hospitalized but their injuries were not life- threatening, the Pentagon said. “There were bodies scattered round the building, some limbless and some headless,” said a resident who arrived minutes after the blast. “I just thank God he didn’t turn into the building — but blew it up out side.” State Department spokesman John Hughes said U.S. diplomatic posts around the world were put on heightened alert as a result of the at tack, which he said was linked to a U.S. veto in the U.N. Security Coun cil of a resolution on Israel’s contin ued occupation of southern Leb anon. Investigations showed the two men drove up a tree-lined road in the suburb ol Awkar, 6 miles from Beirut’s city center and stopped at a series of waist-high concrete blocks on the outer perimeter of the grounds, security sources said. “They argued with the local guards and then fired at them and drove around the teeth,” an embassy source said. “They then drove on and were fired at by U.S. Marine guards, a British bodyguard of the ambassador’s and the local guards.” The truck accelerated along the straight 100-yard road and its load of TNT exploded as it passed in front of the stone building, gouging out a crater 9-feet deep and 24-feet wide. Lebanese military officials said the driver was shot and killed and the other man was presumed to have died in the attack. “The bomber was apparently more or less vaporized,” a security officer said. “We have found no trace of him and only bits of the en gine of the truck we were told he was in. The only thing we have is the crater.” Embassy vehicles were flung along the road by the force of the ex plosion, which sent girders tumbling out of the building and on to the road, damaged dozens of cars and shattered hundreds of windows. Thursday’s explosion at the new embassy, which opened just seven weeks ago, was the third attack on a major U.S. installation in the Leb anese capital since April 1983 and Islamic Jihad has claimed responsi bility for all three. Rings passed down by former students By LORI BROOKS Reporter Imagine ... Upon receiving your senior ring you not only get a piece of metal, but also a piece of Texas A&M’s history. One special piece of Aggie his tory is on the hand of Gary G. Klein, an industrial distribution major from Fort Worth. The 1984 graduate’s new Aggie ring is made from the gold of the 1951 Aggie ring worn by his father, George }. Klein. Gary Klein is the recipient of the first Aggie ring recycled through the Lipscomb Anderson Perpetual Ring Program. The program was created at the re quest of Lipscomb Anderson, a 1927 A&M graduate. Klein said the ring is “real neat” and he plans on passing it down to his own children. Klein said he read about the program in the Texas Aggie. “I thought it was a neat idea. As soon as I read about it I knew that’s what I wanted to do,” the elder Klein said. The Lipscomb Anderson Per petual Ring Program went into effect in January 1984, since the first donation by George Klein there have been 29 other rings donated. Any former student or former student’s family can donate an of ficial Aggie ring to be remade by Any former student can donate an official Aggie ring to be remade for an A&M student. the L. G. Balfour Company for either a designated or undesig nated A&M student. The ring is remade at no cost to the donor or recipient. When the ring is fin ished, the name and class year of the original owner, as well as the name of the new owner will be in scribed inside the ring. Most of the rings donated are for family members or friends, but some of the rings are donated at random. Recipients of the ran dom rings are selected through an impartial drawing. All students who have placed a ring order during the period in which a donated ring is available are eligible. The first random ring was re ceived by Floyd Kaminski, a 1984 graduate. “It really touched something inside,” Kaminski said. “You get caught up in Aggie spirit at yell practices and games, hut this gave me a personal feel ing with it. I feel very lucky and proud td be part of a hew tradi tion,” he said. Kaminski’s ring was donated by Jack Idol, a 1926 graduate. Idol said, “I thought it would be a good idea to let someone else wear it. I hope he enjoys it as much as I did. I was very proud to wear it.” The other random ring was donated by John Cruickshank, a 1922 graduate. Cruickshank said he wore his ring continuously and it became very worn, so his son gave him a new one. “I saw the article about the ring organization in the Aggie News and thought my ring would do a student some good,” Cruickshank said. “I didn’t have anyone to name for it (the ring), so I left it to the ring committee to decide.” The Lipscomb Anderson Per petual Ring Program was created by Jack Fritts, a 1953 graduate. Fritts said, “Lipscomb Anderson originally talked to me about starting a program because he was concerned about what he would do with his ring. He didn’t want to be buried with it, and he had no children or grandchildren at A&M. “The association has problems with people wanting to leave their rings to them. It seems sacrile gious to melt the rings for value. With the input of several people, the association organized a pro gram that allows Aggie rings to be passed down,” he said. The program now is handled through the Ring Office in The Pavilion. In Today’s Battalion rtmentji }.year-«j the ni“ ( ' ClintoiJ ck -ity cofl aying lll( pie “i* assessi 11 ! rriiled "I liscaP deatn» MarsW Local • Low rainfall in Texas has caused a 7-foot drop in the wa ter level at Lake Somerville. See story page 4. • The Sailing Team is getting five new boats which will en hance its chances in future competition. See story page 5. was si 101 bbery ^ a jur° r ' ofsh°f rk 0 nga^ • f lie College Station Planning and Zoning Commission approved an ordinance that regulates the location of sex ually-oriented businesses. See story page 7. Proposition 2 to decide future of PUF By KARI FLUEGEL Staff Writer “Proposition 2: The constitutional amendment to create from general revenue a special Higher Education Fund for construction and related activities, to restructure the Perma nent University Fund and to in crease the number of institutions eli gible to benefit from the Permanent University Fund.” When Texas voters cast their bal lots on Nov. 6, they will be deciding the future of the Permanent Univer sity Fund and the future of 26 Texas colleges and universities. If Proposition 2 passes, the new constitutional amendment will open the PUF to all units of the Texas A&M and the University of Texas Systems. It also will create the Higher Education Assistance Fund, a constitutionally dedicated fund for the 26 state institutions outside the A&M and UT systems. The PUF was established by the state constitution in 1876 to provide support to two “flagship” universi ties — UT and A&M. The endow ment now consists of 2.1 million iicres of land in 19 West Texas coun ties. As of August 1983, the main body of the dedicated fund wr.s worth $1.9 billion and was growing at a rate of 8 percent annually. The body of the fund cannot be spent, only the investment earnings. The revenue from the PUF is called the Available University Fund. In 1982, the AUF provided about $156 million to be distributed between UT and A&M. T he AUF' is constitutionally divided with two- thirds going to UT and one-third going to A&M. The bonding capacity currently is limited to 20 percent of the cash va lue of the PUF. Bond proceeds are limited to new construction and re stricted to those units of the UT and A&M systems designated by the con stitution. A&M system institutions desig nated by the constitution are A&M, Prairie View A&M, Tarleton State University, the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, the Texas Agri culture Extension Service, the Texas Engineering Experiment Station in College Station, the Texas Engi neering Extension Service and the Texas Forest Service. UT system institutions designated by the constitution are UT-Austin including the Marine Science Insti tute at Port Aransas and the McDon ald Observatory at Fort Davis; UT- El Paso; the UT Health Sciences Center in Dallas; the UT Health Sci ences Center in Houston including the Dental School; the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and the School of Public Health; the UT Medical Branch at Galveston and the UT-M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute. “We would have had a hard time during our growth of the ’70s if we wouldn’t have had the use of the PUF and AUF,” Dr. J. Malon South erland, assistant vice president for student services, said. “It (the PUF) has been a most valuable tool.” If the amendment is approved, the bonding capacity will be raised to 30 percent of the cash value of the PUF. If it passes, A&M will add three units and UT will add nine units to the list of institutions which See PUF, page 13