it Aggie scouting group Enrollment in club dropping Page3 Texas major (eaguers Rangers, Astros make nc Page 9 Texas A&M ■ % m m 1 • The Battalion : Vol. 80 No. 104 USPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 26, 1985 -cadets plead guilty to hazing charges eansauo By DAINAH BULLARD Suit {Writer Criminally negligent homicide harges were dismissed and punish- nents for hazing were handed down ;o three former Texas A&M stu- Jents during a trial Monday af- lernoon. A hazing charge against a h no ERlBourth former student was dis- nissed. Jason Miles, Louis Kant her 111 nd Anthony D’Alessandro, all ju- [tiors in the Corps of C^adets, leaded guilty to charges of hazing fore County Court-at-Law Judge larolyn Ruffmo. I The defendants’ statements were lie result of plea bargaining be- pteen county attorney Jim Kuboviak Ind defense attorney W.W. Vance. ield and ,12-11. •ortuiiities they made I. enient was! The four former cadets were in- iicted on their respective charges ept. 28 by a Brazos County Grand ury. The indictments followed a wo-day grand jury investigation nto the circumstances surrounding he Aug. 30 death of Bruce Dean Goodrich, 20, a transfer student Trotn Webster, N.Y. \-dinkbask J Goodrich collapsed and later died nfaheat stroke after participating in i I 2:30 a.m. exercise session con- HighwayCi Butted by the three junior members to plav M his outfit. " Ags retii I Ruffmo ruled that each of the iturdav | three defendant |jay a $250 fine for lazing and $70 in court costs. Each key said.' out there, h. They're natch up »i 19 team n’t have asfi )ur kids m JT , father ol idviceto throw i” the tour - ament is nent the register officii larch 5' :ksup t0 defendant also was required to do nate 100 hours of community service to be completed by June 1 for retri bution. She placed the defendants on probation for 90 days with de ferred adjudication. Under deferred adjudication, the defendant pleads guilty and the judge grants probation, but doesn’t determine guilt. If the defendant successfully completes probation, the charges are removed from his record. If the defendant violates probation, the judge may rule on guilt and the full range of punish ments for the hazing charge may be invoked. The full range of punishments for hazing includes a $25 to $250 fine and 10 days to three months in jail. Ruffmo dismissed the charges of negligent homicide against the three men. In a brief trial following the 30- minute trial for Miles, Fancher and D’Alessandro, Ruffino also dis- nvissed the charge of hazing against Gabriel Cuadra. A six-woman jury found Cuadra guilty Jan. 31 of tampering with evi dence. Ruffmo later gave Cuadra one year of probation and a $500 fine, which he will not have to pay if he meets the terms of his probation. Cuadra was not present at the trial Monday, but was represented by at torney Henry Paine. Kuboviak had requested that each Former cadets (1 to r) An thony D’Allessandro, Jason Miles and Louis Fancher defendant be assessed a $250 fine, charged $70 in court costs and placed on probation for 90 days. He recommended that each defendant be required to donate $750 to the Bruce Goodrich Scholarship Fund at A&M and give 100 hours of commu nity service in their home counties for retribution. Courtesy of UPI leave the courthouse after criminally negligent homi cide charges were dismissed. Kuboviak also requested that the charges of criminally negligent hom icide against Miles, Fancher and D’Alessandro be dismissed. Ruffino did not require the de fendants to make donations to the Bruce Goodrich Scholarship Fund. “If you wish to make a donation to the University., that is your choice and your choice alone,” she said. After the trials, Kuboviak said he made his plea bargain offer after considering the evidence and the wishes of Ward Goodrich, Bruce’s father. “I made the decision based on evi dence and what I thought would be the appropriate charge in this case,” Kuboviak said. “I also honored the wishes of Ward Goodrich.” Kuboviak said Goodrich wanted his son’s death to deter future hazing at A&M. Kuboviak said he spoke with Goodrich several times in person and over the telephone since the grand jury decision in Septem ber. “The truth came out,” Kuboviak said. “T hat was essentially what we were looking for. We wanted the >arties involved to admit responsibi- lity. All we wanted to do was see jus tice done.” Bob Wiatt, director of security and traffic at A&M, agreed with Ku- boviak’s statements. “I think it’s a very fair decision,” Wiatt said of the outcome of the plea bargaining. “There’s no reason for keeping wounds open. There has been accounting from these young men.” However, the parents of some of the former cadets did not think jus tice was served. “It’s not justice, it’s politics,” Lyyn Fancher said. Fancher said her son, Louis Fancher III, and the other de fendants were used as scapegoats for Goodrich’s death. “They’re scapegoats for 108 years of tradition,” she said. “If I sacri ficed my son’s life in front of you, it wouldn’t bring Bruce back. It’s very sad.” Louis Fancher Jr. said he didn’t like the idea of plea bargaining, but believed his son and the other de fendants had little choice. “Once you survey the risk of continuing this thing, the boys made an intelligent decision,” he said. “There was an absolute lack of sup port from the Association of Former Students and the University, When things like that are stacked up against you, you have to decide how much more you want to risk. “I’m satisfied. I think they made the right choice.” Irene Miles, mother of Jason Miles, said she was satisfied with the results of the trial, too. “They will have no criminal re cord now, after they finish their community work and probation,” she said. “This is one of the biggest assets. Who wants a criminal record? They’re not criminals. They’ll make good citizens.” ramm to head committee | Senator asks 1 restricted trade to combat drugs Associated Press WASHINGTON — Texas Sen. Phil Gramm said Monday that the United States should consider cut ting trade relations with countries that tolerate or allow drug snug gling- Gramm, a Republican from Col lege Station, said he has been named Senate chairman of the U.S. dele gation to the U.S.-Mexico Interpar liamentary Group. Relations between the United States and Mexico have been strained recently by the disappear ance in Mexico of a U.S. narcotics tgent and the U.S. response of lengthy searches at border check points, bringing traffic to a stands- 1. Border traffic is now back to nor mal, Gramm said. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, illed Monday for the State Depart ment to warn Americans about re ported violence against Americans south of the border. At a news conference, Gramm said he Could make no judgment about whether such a warning should be issued without more facts. He said he supported dropping foreign aid to countries that do not cooperate in drug enforcement but was now considering a proposal to broaden the sanctions to include “ac cess to American markets.” “What happens in a country like Colombia is that drug trafficking is so profitable that it becomes a pri mary source of income that rivals foreign trade,” Gramm said. “And unless the costs are very high to the government for not complying with oor efforts ... they're under intense pressure internally to look the other way.” Despite the drug enforcement dis pute, Gramm said that as a member of the Interparliamentary Group, which meets later this year in Wash ington, then again in Mexico City, that he would propose a free trade zone with Mexico and eventually Central America. Long-term economic efforts such as trade zones would help stem ille gal immigration into the United States, Gramm said. GOP leader offers new budget plan It's a Bird, Ifs a Plane... Photo by PETER ROCHA No, it’s a plastic “bat” kite caught in the Century Tree in front of Bolton Hall. Mon day’s warm, clear weather provided an ex cellent opportunity for kite flyers. Students happy with change New library hours set Even though new library hours have been in effect only since Sun day, many students have indicated they are happy with them, Tom Ur ban, vice president of academic af fairs, said Monday. Library hours are now Sunday, 9 a.m. to 3 a.m.; Monday through Thursday, 7 a.m. to 3 a.m.; Friday 7 a.m. to midnight; and Saturday 9 a.m. to midnight. Urban said, he was unable to visit the library Sunday night to see how many people were taking advantage of the new hours. Nancy Kent of li brary circulation said the number could not be determined. The extended hours are a result of a $I,700 gift from the Student Senate. At its Feb. 13 meeting, the senate voted to take the money from the Student Service Fee Reserve Ac count and give it to the library. “The Student Government felt this was a worthwhile project, so we decided to fund it this year,” Urban said. The Student Government polled students last semester to discover what library hours students would use. Associated Press AUSTIN — Texas GOP Chair man George Strake offered a solu tion to the state budget crunch Mon day by offering a $ l billion package that includes something borrowed and something new. Strake borrowed $376 million in cost-saving ideas proposed by Demo cratic Comptroller Bob Bullock and Republican Sen. John Leedom of Dallas. But the heart of his package is a 10 percent across-the-board cut in state agency administrative spend- ■ng- “I think it is time to try a new ap proach which everyone seems afraid of but that is fundamental to reduc ing the size and operation of state government,” Strake said at a Capi tol news conference. “I call for belt tightening, budget-cutting or econ omy in government.” Texas lawmakers face a projected revenue shortage of $733 million. Several ways to raise the money have been offered — including Gov. Mark White’s call for a 21 percent cut in higher education spending coupled with a college tuition and state fee hikes. Strake said a 10 percent cut in “bureaucratic overburden” would save $649 million in 1986-87. That, combined with the $376 million worth of Bullock and Leedom ideas, would more than cover the budget crunch. The 10 percent cut would turn around a decade of “spending tax payers’ money with reckless aban don,” Strake said. “And now it’s time to pay the piper,” he added. The administrative cost cuts would not cover state prisons and mental health facilities nor recent in creases for highways and education, according to the former secretary of state. Strake said he is “certain’* that the other state agencies could survive a 10 percent cut in administrative spending. As has become his custom, Strake found blame for White, a Democrat. The GOP chairman said White pushed last year’s $4.6 billion tax hike “despite warnings of falling world oil prices that cast a pall over revenue predictions.” Strake also said White has in creased his staff by 50 percent. White was in Washington on Mon day for a National Governors Asso ciation meeting, but his office re leased figures that show he now has 202 employees, 20 fewer than autho rized by the Legislature and only two more than the most employed by Bill Clements, White’s Republican pre decessor. The Strake proposal includes $144 million in recommended cost saving ideas forwarded by Leedom, whose state money management rec ommendations included possible sale of some state land. The Bullock proposals could save $232 million. But Bullock himself does not believe all his ideas are po litically feasible. “A lot of them, as a practical mat ter, I don’t think will ever pass, not during my tenure in office,” Bullock said Monday. He also said his list of cost-saving ideas met with unsurprising lack of interest from agency heads. Only three agencies sent for details of the suggestions he released late last year. Overall, the comptroller said Strake has hit on the best way to cut spending — across-the-board cuts that do not pit one agency against another. “That’s the only way ever to get meaningful reduction in Texas gov ernment,” he said. Bullock said .Strake visited him last month to discuss budget-cutting. Reagan asks nation’s governors for help Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan asked the nation’s governors Monday to help him reduce huge federal budget deficits, but he spurned their requests that he con sider trimming Pentagon spending and .Social Security and increasing taxes. The governors also disputed Rea gan’s implication that the states are running budget surpluses that will allow them to take over many fed eral programs the president wants to cut. “It’s clear from the president this morning that Social Security, the de- fense budget (and) revenue (are) all off the table,” said Kansas Gov. John Carlin, chairman of the National Governors’ Association. Carlin, a Democrat, spoke follow ing a half-hour White House session between Reagan and his top aides and the governors, who are holding their winter meeting in Washington. During the meeting Reagan de fended his proposals for about $50 billion in spending reductions next year, many of which would cut back or eliminate federal aid programs and subsidies that state and local governments have long cherished. “I hope you can understand that these tough calls have to he made now at the federal level,” Reagan said. “These proposals are rooted both in economic necessity and common sense. There’s simply no justifica tion, for example, for the federal government, which is running a def icit, to be borrowing money to be spent by state and local govern ments, some of which are now run ning surpluses.” Following Reagan’s remarks, re porters were ushered out of the White House East Room, where the president and governors had a ques- tion-and-answer session.