innuHBHMBnM&anBi Area businesses sponsoring Designated Driver Program — Page 5 Winning no longer a given when Owls hosts Ags Saturday — Page 8 Hi Tlifiir’D —.4.4.—.1! The tsattalion Vol. 80 Mo. 27 GSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 23, 1985 Jordan rejects Israeli leader’s peace initiative Associated Press TEL AVIV, Israel — Prime Min ister Shimon Peres said Tuesday he called for negotiations with Jordan because Israel must regain the initia tive in the search for peace. Peres’ proposals on Monday ap peared to offer anything new for the Arabs. The proposals were promptly rebuffed hy Jordan and criticized at home by Israeli hawks. The call for direct talks on ending the state of war and resolving the Palestinian problem came as Jordan was trying to improve relations with neighboring Syria, a hard-line state that has refused to talk peace until it achieves military parity with Israel. A statement issued Monday, after |ordanian-Syrian talks in Riyadh un- Jer Saudi Arabian sponsorship, said Iordan rejected “all partial and uni lateral settlements with Israel.” A high-ranking official in Amman said his was King Hussein’s response to he Peres speech. Peres acknowledged there was )nly a “possibility” his peace feeler would be answered, but he cau- lioned against taking initial public ■■eactions from Jordan and other |\rab countries at face value. [ wouldn’t judge very much the leactions by the public declarations,” je told a meeting of Jewish leaders New York. T There was no immediate reaction from key Arab moderates, such as Egypt, or from the Palestine Liber- Ition Organization. The silence could indicate that Arab govern ments were awaiting more definitive statements from Jordan and the PLO, which agreed in February on a joint approach to Middle East peace. PLO chairman Yasser Arafat told a news conference Monday in Ku wait, before the Peres speech, that he rejected earlier offers of negotia tions with Jordan and self-rule for Palestinians in Israeli-occupied Arab territories. “I am sure no Palestinian party will dare to take part in any negotia tions without PLO approval,” Arafat said. He claimed Peres was trying to “cover up his iron-fist policy” with peace proposals. In his U.N. speech, Peres did not specifically rule out talks with the PLO, but he said Israel would not talk with those engaged in acts of terror. Peres noted that the late President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, who signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979, pre viously was its enemy. “Sadat attacked us in a war, and we did not ask whether he had fought against us,” he said. “From the moment he approached us for peace, we accepted him according to his current situation.” Rightists in Israel’s year-old coali tion government criticized the pro posals, attacking the prime min ister’s conciliatory tone toward the PLO and his bending toward Jordan on an international peace confer ence. Ham it up Members of the Texas A&M Singing Cadets ham it up during their s rendition of “Dames” in a special concert for the Corps of Cadets Tuesday night in Rudder Auditorium. The performance was a Photo by GREG BAILEY scaled-down version of the group’s normal repertoire but included a variety of tunes. Election ’86 Senator Brown wonts to be first Republican attorney general Special envoy says U.S. deplores Israeli air raid Associated Press I TUNIS, Tunisia — President Reagan’s special envoy said Tuesday jliat the United States deplores the ■Israeli air raid on the PLO head- |uarters outside Tunis as it does “all ■acts of terrorism.” 1 Deputy Secretary of State John C. jlvhkehead, ending a diplomatic peace-mending tour of the area after |the Israeli raid and the Achille Lauro ship hijacking, said in a Statement to reporters, “The bomb- ;ing surprised and shocked Ameri- Ilans as much as it did Tunisians. We Beplore it, as we deplore all acts of ierrorism wherever they may ocur.” K He referred to the “tragic and un- jlecessary loss of innocent lives” in jtlie Israeli attack Oct. 1 and said he Repeated to officials of this U.S. ally in North Africa “that the United States was not involved in this in any toy and had no knowledge of it.” There was no official reaction in Tel Aviv to Whitehead’s remarks. Israel Radio led its 5 p.m. news broadcast with the story, comment ing that Whitehead’s statement “in Jflect contradicts the original Amer ican declaration on the bombing.” In Washington, State Department bpokeswoman Anita Stockman said (late Tuesday, “We have spoken to the deputy secretary (Whitehead), and he said he did not describe the Israeli raid as a terrorist act; he did not intend to imply that it was such an act; and his statement should not be read to suggest otherwise.” Shortly after the Israeli air strike, White House spokesman Larry Speakes called it a “legitimate” de fense against terrorism. The administration later said the raid “could not be condoned” be cause one act of violence inspires an other and “a pattern of escalation is established.” The United States abstained Oct. 4 in the U.N. Security Council vote on a Tunisian resolution that called the air strike “armed aggression against Tunisian territory.” Whitehead said in the statement to reporters that he expressed Rea gan’s regret for the raicl to Tunisian officials. He refused to answer ques tions after delivering the statement. The special envoy also visited Rome and Cairo to ease tensions cre ated when U.S. Navy jets forced an Egyptian airliner carrying the hi jackers of the Italian cruise liner to land in Sicily, and by the dispute over Italy’s release of a Palestinian guerrilla leader who also was on the plane. J. E. “Buster” Brown By GENE ROBERTS Reporter If State Senator J.E. “Buster” Brown wins his bid for attorney gen eral in 1986, he will be the first Re publican attorney general in the his tory of Texas. Brown told Aggie GOP members Tuesday night that if elected he would defend the Constitution and laws of the state of Texas. “The issue in 1986 is strong law and order and someone who will de fend the state,” Brown said. “Experts said I couldn’t beat a 20- year Democrat incumbent when I ran for senator, but I did,” Brown said. “It won’t be easy, but with the people on my side we can do the same in 1986.” Brown said that Attorney General Jim Mattox has neglected his job by refusing to appeal cases. Two of those cases specifically involved Texas A&M — the Gay Student Services issue and the Zentgraf Con sent Decree. “Take either side on the issues, but the University asked the attor ney general to defend it and he refu sed,” Brown said. “That’s like pick ing and chosing when he’s attorney general.” Brown said he would like to im prove on criminal justice because he believes citizens are tired of watch ing a system that favors criminals in stead of the innocent. Part of Brown’s crack-down in cludes Proposition 11 which will be on the November 5 ballot. The proposition is designed to eliminate appeals based on technical discrep ancies such as typographical errors on indictments in criminal cases. “Whether or not the person is -guilty or innocent has nothing to do with a misspelled word,” he said. Brown said (Republican strength in Texas has been a growing trend for the last six years and could be an advantage in the coming election. “The reason for the shift is plain and simple,” he said. “The Republi can Party stands for something im portant.” Brown said, “I’ve been rated as the most conservative member of the Senate, and I’m proud of it.” State judge upholds no pass, no play statute Associated Press HOUSTON — A state district judge who earlier declared the Texas no pass, no play rule unconsti tutional on Tuesday upheld the con troversial statute. State District Judge Marsha An thony, who last May ruled the law unconstitutional, refused to grant a temporary injunction that would have kept the state from enforcing it. Under the rule, students must achieve a grade of 70 in all subjects at the end of each six weeks grading period or be declared ineligible for extracurricular activities for the fol lowing six weeks. Anthony, a former teacher, ruled that the case would be tried on its merits Nov. 18 as a class action suit, affecting all elementary and second ary school students in the state’s 1,100 school districts. In her earlier decision, Anthony said the law was unconstitutional be cause it did not apply equally to all high school students. The Texas Su preme Court overruled her decision in August. “We are pleased that the judge made this a class action suit because we will now have to try the case only once,” Assistant Attorney General Kevin O’Hanlon said. Houston attorney Anthony Shep pard, who also is appealing the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, filed the challenge Tuesday and sought the class action trial. Patricia Patterson, who testified earlier that her daughter, Lori, 15, had become distraught with a failing grade in geometry, disagreed with the judge’s ruling. “What they are trying to do is wrong,” Patterson said. “My child’s extracurricular is just as important as French, math or English. She needs them all to grow into a mature adult.” Patterson said her daughter had three As, and a B and C in other sub jects but the threat of not being able to perform with the band could jeopardize all of her school work. The girl is a member of the Spring Westfield symphonic band. “She may end up with all Fs be cause of this rule,” Patterson said. Sheppard said he thought the rule provided no margin for error. “My personal opinion is that if they are going to jerk students out of activities, it should be for a shorter period of time,” Sheppard said. “And it should apply only to a small number of activities.” Sheppard said students involved in vocational courses, including af ter-school typing classes, also are af fected by the rule. ports disagree over effects of water proposals :•*! : 1 ’s. A Ned Fritz By JENS B. KOEPKE Staff Writer In a debate Tuesday night, an op ponent of the Texas water plan said that a “sleeper clause” in Proposition 1 allows the Legislature unlimited water expenditures, while a proposi tion supporter contended that the water plan successfully balances en vironmental and economic water is sues. Ned Fritz, chairman of the Texas committee on natural resources, op posed the water package, while Steve Stagner, executive director of the Texas Water Alliance, supported it. The debate was sponsored by the Texas A&M Regional Studies Club, The Sierra Club and Greenpeace and was moderated by Dr. Wayne Jordan, director of the Texas Water Resource Institute. Stagner said, “It (Water Bill) is an effort to give the state some tools with which it can help local entities finance projects and to put in place management and conservation mechanisms in the state water poli cy.” Fritz countered that the water plan was throwing money at the wa ter problem. He showed the audi ence of about 150 people an over- i sized check for “all you want” made ' out to “the Texas Water Commis sion” for “water projects, needed or not” to emphasize his point. The “sleeper clause” in Proposition 1, Fritz said, allows the Legislature to create unlimited special appropria tions for water assistance programs and constitutes a blank check to “wa ter hustlers” (bond speculators). Stagner argued that the Legis lature has always had the constitu tional privilege to appropriate spe cial water funds and used it in 1981, while Fritz said that the 1981 action should have been challenged as un constitutional and that many attor neys say that the Legislature does not have this power. Fritz ques tioned why it would be necessary to have the “sleeper clause” if the state already had this power. From an environmental and con- servational standpoint, the bill is an improvement over present condi tions, Stagner said. Water devel opment boards are currently re quired only to consider the general ecological effects of a water project, he said, while the bill provides “dis cretion within a statutory defi nition.” Fritz replied that common law, rather than statutory law, has pro vided some regulations as to what environmental concerns a board must consider in reviewing a project. The water bill leaves too much up to Jhe discretion of boards that are dominated by water development in terests, he said, and would result in the needless destruction of rich farmland and valuable recreation acreage. House Bill 2, the Texas Water Bill, is a comprehensive plan dealing with conservation, development, flood control and quality protection of the surface and underground state water resources. It will be fi nanced by Propositions 1 and 2, which will be voted upon in the Nov. 5 election. Proposition 1 would authorize the sale of an additional $980 million in See Water plan, page 10 Steve Stagner