( \ Symphony opens new season tonight See page 4 Bonfire centerpole will be raised today Slocum says 'Stangs will test Ags' defense See page 8 See page 9 Texas A&M # The Battalion Serving the University community i|. 81 ho. 46 GSRS 045360 20 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, November 1, 1984 Members of the fightin’ Texas Aggie Band fire. The centerpole for the 75th-anniver- work diligently in preparation for the bon- sary bonfire goes up today at 4:03 p.m. Seniors get rings today; new orders being taken By KARLA K. MARTIN Stuff Writer It’s time for those Aggies who, have earned their gold t,o enjoy it. And while the Aggie rings ordered in July will arrive today, another ring order now is being taken in (he Pavilion. Until Nov. 30, Texas 'A&M stu dents who have passed 92 semester hours, with at least 30 of those hours taken at A&M, are eligible to order their senior rings. St udents who will complete 92 hours at the end of the semester should bring in their mid term report for verification. Students who wish to order their rings should go by the Ring Office, in room 119 of the Pavilion, and leave their full name and iderttifica- tion number. After one or two weeks, students should return to or der their rings. Carolyn Swanzy, class ring admin istrator, said this time lapse is to al low the ring office to check students’ transcripts, but students who don’t want to wait can bring in their unof ficial transcript and order their rings immediately. The unofficial tran script can be purchased at Heaton Hall for 50 cents. Students must pay for their rings when they order them. The men’s ring prices are $233.50 for 10 karat gold and $317.00 for 14 karat gold. Women’s rings cost $122.00 for 10 karat gold and $150.50 for 14 karat go'd. While there is only one Aggie ring style, students can purchase their rings with either the rose-gold finish or the antique-gold finish. Students also may buy their rings with a diamond, at an extra cost of $58 to $600 depending on the size and quality of the diamond. Those who can’t afford the rings, however, have two options. One op tion is a Student Financial Aid loan. Janice Cromer, a receptionist in the Financial Aid office, said after st udents’ transcripts have been veri fied, students should go to room 229 of the Pavilion and fill out a short term loan application, and write on the back of the application that the loan is for a senior ring. Any full-time student with an overall GPR of 2.0 is eligible for a ring loan. The maximum amount loaned is $233.50 for men’s rings and $122.00 for women’s rings (the price of the 10 karat gold rings). Stu dents have six months to pay back the loans, which include the ring price plus 10 percent interest. The loans will be distributed Nov. 26 from 10 to 11:30 a.m., and 1 to 3 p.m. Students should bring a copy of their fee slip and their student ID when they pick up their loans. A second option students have is the Lipscomb Anderson Perpetual Ring Program. This program, spon sored by the Association of Former Students, began in May 1983 in honor of Lipscomb Anderson, a 1927 A&M graduate. Anderson encouraged the Board of Directors to initiate this program, in which former students donate their Aggie rings to be remade into new Aggie rings. Students who re ceive these rings will have their name along with the name of the former student written inside. While the Perpetual Rings cost nothing to the students, they only are available when when there are ring donors. Chile: No injuries from explosion United Press International SANTIAGO, Chile — A bomb ex ploded outside an industrial fair Wednesday while President Augusto Pinochet was 250 yards away inau gurating the exhibition, witnesses said. There were no injuries and the Chilean leader was in no danger. The bomb exploded on a railway track just outside the fence sur rounding the Santiago Industrial Fair grounds. The blast sent pieces of the railway Hying into the exhibi tion grounds. The bombing came amid a rising wave of violence and protest s against 11 years of military rule in Chile. Seven people were killed and 330 ar rested in demonstrations Monday and Tuesday. SWAMP group plans MSC demonstration despite controversy By CAMILLE BROWN Staff Writer Students Working Against Many Problems plans a demonstration around the Memorial Student Cen ter today at noon “to encourage a general reconsideration of traditions that we feel no longer reflect the atti tudes of the majority of students at A&M.” SWAMP, an officially recognized student organization, plans to sit on the grass surrounding the MSC, but heat from University officials is forc ing members of SWAMP to rethink their plans. University officials fear violence may break out because rumors are circulating that a group of dorm stu dents may use force to keep the demonstrators off the grass. An un signed flyer has been passed out to residents of Davis-Cary Hall which calls on “D.G. Fighters” to “be out side the MSC at 12:00 noon” to “kick some ass.” To have a demonstration at A&M, a group must have a permit issued by the University. David Bergen, who is in charge of issuing permits for demonstrations on campus, said that if SWAMP had filed for a per mit for its demonstration, it would have been refused. So SWAMP did not apply for a permit. “It (the permit) would be denied on the basis of the reasonable time, place and manner doctrine,” Bergen said. “The University controls rea sonable time, place and manner of any event on campus, and we did not feel that was a reasonable place to hold that particular event. “We were afraid for their safety and the safety of others,” he said. Robert Wiatt, director of security and traffic for the University Police, said he did not know what to expect of the demonstration. Wiatt said “appropriate action will be taken to exclude the possibility of a violent confrontation. They (SWAMP) know exactly what kind of action I will take given a certain situation.” The consequences,of holding the demonstration on the grass of the MSC without a permit were laid out for representatives of SWAMP in a meeting held Wednesday in Wiatt’s office at the University Police build ing. Students from SW’AMP were in vited into the meeting but the press was not. Wiatt closed the meeting to the press because he said it was a “business meeting in my own private office.” Hugh Stearns, a member of SWAMP, said that in the meeting Wiatt threaten^ to arrest anyone who did not get off the grass after one verbal warning. “They said anyone on the grass without a permit would be arrested for disorderly conduct,” said Stearns. Among those present at the meet ing were John Koldus, vice president of student services; David Bergen, student development specialist for student affairs; Terry Anderson, faculty adviser for SWAMP, rep resentatives of SWAMP; Brann Johnson of the American Civil Lib erties Union; and Wiatt. After the meeting Koldus said, “I think we’re all in agreement that protest is appropriate within the confines and the rules and regula tions of the institution. When they go outside the confines we set up is when it becomes a problem. We’ve never allowed demonstrations on that particular area of the grass.” Anderson, the adviser for the group, said the administration is op posed to the protest. He said, how ever, that he is taking no position on the issue. Despite threats from the adminis tration, SWAMP will be at the MSC at noon today. But whether they will be on the grass or not is still to be de cided by the members of the group. “We will definitely be there to morrow,” Stearns said, “but we have no clear plans yet.” Voters in Texas to consider 8 constitution amendments United Press International AUSTIN — Texas voters will be asked on Nov. 6 to again alter the state’s 108-year-old, bottom- heavy constitution by approving eight amendments, including proposals to increase legislators’ pay and to set up a college con struction fund. Already laden with 263 amendments, the Texas constitu tion has been systematically al tered by voters every two years since 1879. Since 1881, state lawmakers have sought voter approval of higher legislative pay 20 times but have been successful only four times: in 1930, 1954, 1960 and 1975. The last amendment set monthly salaries at $600 for House members and senators and also established a $30-per- day stipend for each day the Leg islature is in regular session (140 days every two years) and special session. In odd-numbered years when the Legislature meets, a law maker earns a minimum of $11,400 a year. Office expenses such as staff salaries, postage, etc., are paid from different funds. Amendment No. 8 on the Nov. 6 ballot asks voters to eliminate the $30 per diem and make it a floating amount tied to the maxi mum allowable federal tax de duction for legislative expenses. That amount currently is $75 per day, meaning the minimum yearly in-session pay would rise to $17,700. Most legislators and other sup porters of the pay hike argue it would better enable less wealthy working people to take time off from their jobs to serve in the Legislature, while opponents say lawmakers already get hefty tax deductions for their service and should tighten their belts along with other state employees. Amendment No. 2, commonly called Proposition 2, would set up a $100 million a year construction fund to be shared by 26 state col leges and universities. A 1982 constitutional amend ment repealed the state property tax, which had been set up to fund college construction but was unequally assessed. Other proposed amendments include: • No. 1, which would give state-chartered banks the same rights and privileges enjoyed by federally-chartered banks. • No. 3, which would allow parents, brothers and sisters who are dependents of a public safety officer to collect state aid if the of ficers are killed while on hazard ous duty. • No. 4, which would abolish the county treasurer’s offices in Bexar and Collin counties. • No. 5, which would permit the Senate to elect a successor to the lieutenant governor in the case the lieutenant governor be comes incapacitated or dies. • No. 6, which would allow public funds to be used to pay mutual insurance companies’ premiums on “nonassessable” hfe, health and accident insur ance policies and on annuity con tracts. • No. 7, which would change the membership of the State Commission on Judicial Conduct and alter the ways in which the commission may discipline judges. Research park to be new home of Ocean Drilling Project Editor s note: / his is the fourth of n Inepart series on the Texas A&M Re- s«ir7j Park. By ROBIN BLACK Senior Staff Writer Texas A&M has a toehold on the success of its new research park. Mark Money, A&M’s vice chan cellor of the research park and cor porate relations, said he feels the University should have six to eight buildings in the park within the next few years to ensure initial success. Two years after its birth as the brainchild of A&M Board of Re gents Chairman H. R. “Bum” Bright, the Texas A&M Research Park has two confirmed residents and plans for a facelift. Ground was broken earlier this month for a $5.5 million land reno vation project that will install streets, bridges, utilities and lighting on the 318-acres designated for the park on the west campus. While the landscaping project goes on, the two buildings will be going up. The first building to go up will house the Ocean Drilling Project, an international partnership of scien tists and governments who joined to gether to study the structure and history of the earth beneath the ocean basins. The program is being underwrit ten by the National Science Founda tion, a federal agency that has ap propriated almost $30 million a year for ten years to the program head quarters at A&M. The NSF has picked the Joint Oceanographic Institutions, Inc. to manage the program. The JOI is a consortium of 10 major oceano graphic institutions, including A&M. In the program, scientists will study the rocks that fill and underlie the ocean basins in order to under stand such phenomena as continen tal drift, the structure of the earth’s interior, and changes in climate through time. The scientists hope that through the study they will be able to better understand the structure of the planet. The ODP will provide core sam ples from beneath the oceans’ floors as well as the facilities to study those samples. Thoroughly studying the samples will require the work of different branches of science, from paleonto logy to geochemistry and geophy sics. The facility at A&M will be re sponsible for: • Implementing science planning and operations • Engineering development and improvement of drilling technology • Staffing and supplying scien tists on the drillship • Curating and distributing core samples and data • Publishing scientific results Cost for the ODP building is esti mated at around $5 million. The other building that is going up in the park is a new administra tion building. See RESEARCH, page 8 Systems Administration Building