The Battalion SwvVol. 80 No. 100 GSPS 045360 16 pages OF — •ASTlC&e . IHlM&J ||}! College Station, Texas Wednesday, February 20, 1985 Prison reform costs could hit $800 million Associated Press AUSTIN — It would take up to $800 million in construction and more alternatives to imprisonment for Texas to have enough prison cells over the next 10 years, accord ing to a consultants’ report given to state leaders Tuesday. The State Board of Corrections had planned to release the lengthy, $200,000 report at a meeting Tues day. But Chairman Robert Gunn said Gov. Mark White and legislative leaders instructed him to keep the report confidential until Friday. It was a matter of “protocol,” Gunn said. The report was presented to White, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and House Speaker Gib Lewis during a two-hour closed-door briefing in White’s office. “Everyone that has looked at this thing decided it was just so com plex,” Gunn said. But Dick Merkel, spokesman for Lewis, said the speaker “certainly” didn’t ask that the report not be re leased Tuesday. Steve Dial, spokesman for Hobby, said the lieutenant governor did not object to the release of the report. In fact. Hobby released a written statement in anticipation that the re port would be distributed. Hershel Meriwether, an aide to White, said the report was still pre liminary. “He (White) wanted to look at it and to give some input before it was released,” Meriwether said. “The in formation is going to be made pub lic. That’s not a problem.” The proposed 10-year prison plan was prepared by the consulting firm of Henningson, Durham and Rich ardson at the prison board’s request. Lawmakers who were briefed on it told reporters the study offers a detailed, unit-by-unit review of whafs needed to meet growth and bring the Texas Department of Cor rections into compliance with orders from U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice. “It’s awfully sobering,” said Bryan Sen. Kent Caperton, adding that hundreds of millions of state dollars are needed “despite the fact that we have continued to put significant dollars into the prison system, de spite the fact that we enacted signifi cant reforms last session.” “My impression is to bring the present prison system into compli ance, you’re probably talking about $350 million” worth of construction and renovation work, said Sen. Ray Farabee, D-Wichita Falls. The “minimum” cost Of the 10- year program would be $700 mil lion, and that would require new laws that would send fewer people to prison, said Farabee, chairman of the Senate State Aff airs Committee. The report presented Tuesday in cludes only facilities, it did not speak to money needed for additional TDC staff. Much of the money appropriated in past years was “squandered” by the TDC, said House Law Enforce- Prompt reporting aids crime probes N, ft. has fa' • Heart, fa' 1 in Views ivea McFatkfe zincing d' 1 lad eve” lone Photo by DEAN SAITO Isosceles Staircase Mike Leggett, an engineering technology major from Wiesbaden, West Germany, takes the staircase down in the Blocker Building on his way outside Tuesday. Student representation Elections to be discussed : the trad 1 oiinded' t V agine« : ' By SHERRIE COUCH Reporter Elections for student body presi dent, Student Government exec- (jjjutive vice presidents, yell leaders, Residence Hall Association exec- j ])0l utive officers, Off-Campus Aggies representativestives, class officers and Graduate Student Council posi- * j WI ^ ke March 27-28. , „nf§ Students interested in filing for Vake f j & the na” r adb call egan 10 c e ns , of other any of these positions in the Univer sity elections should attend an infor mational meeting Thursday in 501 Rudder. A short presentation explaining important dates and general rules for campaigning will be made to the prospective candidates, election co commissioner, Laura Madia, said. Then, representatives from each or ganization will talk to candidates about the positions the candidates are applying for. A minimum grade point ratio is one of the requirements that must be met by candidates. Students may begin filing for po sitions Monday in 214 Pavilion from 9 a m. to 4 p m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Filing ends March 1. By CATHIE ANDERSON Staff Writer Bryan-Gollege Station is modern- day America, says Bob Wiatt, direc tor of traffic and security. If stu dents think they’re in some backwa ter town, they’re wrong, he says. “This is the modern world,” he says. “This is not Wonderland, and we are not Alices.” (Times are committed in College Station and on campus. Wiatt ad vises prudence on the part of stu dents to help avoid becoming a pos sible victim and a quick report to the police when a crime is committed. Wiatt says police investigations into crimes on the A&M campus have been hampered in the past be cause students didn’t contact the University Police quickly enough. Police officers might have cap tured a man who recently committed an assault in Keathley Hall if the vic tim had contacted the police earlier, Wiatt says. Instead she talked it over with her friends before reporting it two hours later to the police. The victim was pot physically in jured, but the incident has been listed by police as assault because the young woman was threatened by vi olence. The assailant was described as a 20-year-old black male, about 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighing 120 pounds. Since the young woman gave an accurate description and noticed un usual things about the man, police my Subtle sex discrimination possible: prof Ugh , e M®n 2nd D G ^Editors note: I his is the first nr ti lde cle in a two-part series on possible urge 011 '' discrimination against women at | e n. Texas A&M. sd SJ By SARAH OATES * d t0 ^| Staff Writer ■ said).■Whether women are discrimi- ake it 10 ' nated against at Texas A&M is a dif- Jt ’ ficult question to answer. While j n gint°: there is no statistical evidence show- (he ing that a problem exists, one A&M t stuck 1 professor says discrimination could W' be So subtle students don’t recognize it. —It also could be that students sim ply don’t care, said Dr. Terry Ander son, associate professor of history. “The general idea here is that you put your head in the sand,” said An derson, who has acted as faculty ad viser to women’s organizations on campus. A&M's 33,859 students — about 14,000 of which are women — have very little “equal rights awareness,” he said. This could have something to do with the current trend among stu dents toward conservatism, Ander son said. “We have very little feminist awa reness,” he said. “I teach women’s liberation in my recent history class and most of the women don’t even know there’s a state equal rights amendment. “Part of it is being conservative. To many, this means being de tached, uninterested. A lot of the women here aren’t aware of what’s going on with women’s rights, prob ably because A&M is more techni cally oriented. Liberal arts institu tions tend to have more student activism.” Anderson said most female stu dents probably don’t feel discrimi nated against. “There isn’t any blatant discrimi nation against women except in the Corps,” he said. “It’s a more subtle form of discrimination. For exam ple, I’ve had a couple of female stu dents say they wanted planned par enthood facilities on campus. Forty percent of the campus population is female, so why don’t we have that?” The reason is not a lack of aware ness, but of facilities, said Kathy Jin- kins, a Registered Nurse at the AP Beutel Health Center. While the center calls in two local gynecologists on a consulting basis, it does not run a women’s clinic or offer birth con trol counseling. A 1984 national study on discrimi nation against women on college campuses says it takes many forms and occurs in all areas of campus life. The Project on the Status and Education of Women found discrim ination against women may be as bla tant as verbal or sexual harassment, or as subtle as ignoring a female stu dent’s opinion. Inequitable pay structures for See Sex, page 13 ment Committee Chairman Ray Kel ler, R-Duncanville. Farabee said the immediate prob lem is support facilities, not beds. The report said TDC’s current ca pacity is about 43,000. TDC re ported 37,400 prisoners as of Tues day. “We have run TDC somewhat like a blind dog in a meathouse,” Fara bee said. “We have tried to respond to immediate crises. We have built more buildings and we have not pro vided all the support facilities that you have to have.” What’s needed, he said, are kitch ens, urinals, showers and recreation areas. He said the consultants offered three scenarios: TDC population would hit 92,000 by 1995 if no changes are made in state criminal laws. With some reforms to ease punishment, the population would be 62,000. A major change in atti tudes on punishment would result in a 1995 prison population of about 50,000. “It was pointed out that Texas in carcerates three times as many peo ple as most states,” Farabee said. “There are other ways that are less expensive. They may not be as satis fying. They may not be quite as se cure. But we have to look at these al ternatives for low-risk offenders. Caperton said, “We are tough on criminals in Texas. I think we should continue to be so, but we can’t be mindless in our approach.” officers probably could have caught him in the vicinity, Wiatt says. Wiatt says security will not be in creased in the dorm area. But police officers patrol the campus, and a car shouldn’t be too far away if there is trouble, he says. “We don’t have the manpower to put two or three officers near every dorm on campus,” Wiatt says. The suspect told the young woman that he didn’t know where a dormitory room was, Wiatt says, so she decided to show him how to get there. When they were going down the stairwell, the man fondled her. Wiatt says that the excuse given to the victim in this instance also has been used in similar circumstances on campus. He says A&M has had relatively few assault cases. “Students shouldn’t feel obligated to take the extra, good citizen’s step,” Wiatt says. “They’ve got to start using some prudence in their actions.” Jan Winniford, assistant director of student affairs, agrees that prudence is the best precaution for students. Winniford says students living in the residence halls tend to think of fellow residents as being “one big, happy family,” but by taking this kind of attitude, they’re setting themselves up for a crime. Most research indicates that indi viduals committing assault or theft look for an available situation, Win- See Crime, page 6 Supreme Court to consider school prayer Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Su preme Court said Tuesday it will consider letting public schools al low students to meet during school hours for prayer and reli gious worship. The justices, urged on by the Reagan administration, said it will review a ruling that banned such meetings at a Williamsport, Pa., high school even though the school allows students to conduct virtually all types of non-religious meetings during the same peri ods. Administration lawyers at tacked a federal appeals court’s ban on the meetings, saying it casts constitutional doubt on a new federal law requiring public schools to provide “equal access” for student religious groups. The high court’s decision is ex pected sojnetime next year. The school prayer dispute, an other outgrowth of the Supreme Court’s 1962 decision outlawing organized prayer sessions in pub lic schools, arose when a group of students at Williamsport Area High School sought permission to form a religious group. The students wanted to meet twice a week during the 2,500- student school’s 30-minute activ ity periods. During those periods, held just after homeroom, about 25 differ ent student groups as varied as the Future Homemakers of America, the Spanish club, and the school newspaper meet. The student religious group initially won approval to meet, but after about 45 students at tended the first meeting they were told further meetings would be “legally improper.” Ten members of the group sued the school district in 1982, charging that their freedoms of speech, religion and association and their right to equal protection had been violated. A federal trial judge ruled for the students, but the 3rd U S. Cir cuit Court of Appeals overturned the ruling.