A The Battalion Vol. 82 No. 45 GSPS 045360 16 pages College Station, Texas Friday, October 31, 1986 Profs work to start club despite money barriers By Sondra Pickard Senior Staff Wr iter With tentative approval from the rogrd of Regents and President Frank E. Vandiver, a group of A&M professors is working to overcome fi- ■pial barriers so a faculty club can je esiablished on the 11th floor of ludper Tower. An interim board of directors, ap- poinit'd in the spring by the Faculty Senile and made up of several fac- altynnembers, has been negotiating frith) University officials and study- ngfhe feasibility and costs of such a Sub. I Dr Brann Johnson, associate pro- fessoi of geophysics and a board neraber, said the major worry has jeen how to finance the club. |“As it is now,” Johnson said, “we ire lot working on the premise that /le’iy going to get any type of finan- jallubsidy from the University, al- iiough that would be nice. ^Hie board is certainly looking at :veiy option it can to get some assis ts — if not money, then maybe iervires.” if not subsidized by the Univer- lityldues from club members and Htions would have to finance the club, lie said. ^kny other major universities in Texa^ have faculty clubs. The Uni- kersitv of Texas faculty club, for ex ample, gets about $100,000 per year the school to cover its ex penses, Johnson said. | He said the problems of where to mouse the faculty club and whether ^Bol can be served are no longer jissues He University has made the up per two stories of Rudder Tower available for lease by the club and the Board of Regents has said alco hol i>uld be legally served there. Jcfinson said the interim board of directors is trying to get a lease from the University. ^«’ve been attempting to get a spedf r lease from the University,” he said, “but it’s still being put toge ther.” Although Rudder Tower is the primai \ location being considered, Johnson said the board also is con sidering locating the club at a facility jffqtmpus. Bui he said no specific offers have teeflmade, only suggestions. In the near future, the board plans to poll the A&M faculty hrough a questionnaire to deter- nine what the club members want and will be willing to support, John son said. “The board is trying to establish what services are going to be avail able that are consistent with the ex penses the membership would be able to sustain,” Johnson said. “It’s essentially a market and cost analy sis. “Since we were not promised any type of financial subsidy, we are try ing to find a way to make the club as economical as possible so as to en courage as broad and complete a membership as possible.” By Craig Renfro Staff Writer A surplus of stolen bicycles has spurred the city of College Station to consider passing an ordinance re quiring bike owners to register their vehicles with the city. City Manager William Cole said that under the ordinance it would cost $3 to register each bicycle, and that persons who fail to register their bicycles could face a fine of up to $200. The city council considered the ordinance at its last meeting, but de layed action to give the item further consideration. Cole said some council members were concerned over the amount of the fine, and how the law would be enforced. Another concern was whether the registration would be voluntary or mandatory. The council will discuss the item at its workshop meeting Wednesday, Cole said. College Station Police Lt. Bernie Kapella said he hopes the ordinance is passed, because it will enable the city to return stolen bicycles to their rightful owners. Kapella said 250 bicycles are sto len each year. The department re covers 80 percent of the stolen bicy cles, but can’t return them because they don’t know who the owners are, he said. The unclaimed bicycles are sold at a city auction, he said. The two major financial troubles the board is facing are the day-to- day operational costs of the club and possible construction costs if the up per floors in Rudder Tower have to be remodeled to meet the club’s needs. “We don’t want to make money,” Johnson said. “We want to have a club that will provide an area for in teraction among faculty. “If you’re in the faculty, the way that we’re structured, there is very little opportunity for faculty to inter act with each other except within their immediate work environment.” “We recover 200 (bicycles) and don’t know who they belong to,” Ka pella said. “Some of these are $600 bicycles that we auction for $100 just because we don’t know who the owner is.” Bryan Police Chief Charles Phelps said Bryan has had a similar ordi nance in effect for 25 years. How ever, he said, the law is not strictly enforced. “The problem is that we don’t want to create a negative image with youngsters,” Phelps said. Another problem with the law is that citizens don’t take the time to register their property, he said. “It’s just apathy,” Phelps said. “People don’t take the time to do it and they don’t worry about it until it happens to them.” Kapella said another reason the ordinance should be passed is to help the police identify bicycle riders involved in accidents. “Our concern is that people ride their bicycles, but often don’t carry any identification,” Kapella said. “In the event of a serious accident the police would be able to identify the person if the bicycle was registered.” If the ordinance is passed, Kapella said special registration drives will be conducted to encourage people to participate. “The idea is not to generate reve nue for the city, but to have some way to get these bikes back,” Kapella said. CS council considers ordinance requiring bicycle registration Crews raised the centerpole for bonfire 1986 at 4:03 Thursday afternoon on Texas A&M’s Duncan Field. Bonfire is scheduled to be lighted Nov. 25 at “dark-thirty.” Clements wins majority of votes in MSC mock elections By Jinks Gholson Reporter ■ The results are in, and students of (Texas A&M predict Republican can didate Bill Clements will reclaim his Igovernor’s chair in Austin. Clements claimed 63.4 percent of the vote over Democratic incumbent Mark White and Libertarian candi date Teresa Doyle in the mock elec tion sponsored by the Memorial Stu dent Center Political Forum on Thursday. Natalie Hopkins, travel and spe cial events coordinator of Political Forum, said she expected students to vote a highly Republican ballot, but results didn’t come out close to a straight ticket at all. Libertarians re ceived only a slight percentage of the vote. Before the election, Hopkins said she expected about 3,000 students to participate in the mock election. But only 498 students marked their choices at the polls this year., In a close race for District 6, Re publican U.S. Rep. Joe Barton, re ceived 43.7 percent of the vote to top Democrat Pete Geren. In the race for lieutenant gover nor, Democrat Bill Hobby received 58.6 percent of the vote to win out over Republican David Davidson and Libertarian Bill Howell. In the race for attorney general, Republican Roy R. Barrera received 51.2 percent of the vote over his op ponents, Democrat Jim Mattox and Libertarian Mike Stephens. In other results: • Democrat Bob Bullock stole 83.1 percent of the vote for Comp troller of Public Accounts over Lib ertarian George Meeks. • Democrat Ann W. Richards won 85.7 percent of the vote for State Treasurer over Libertarian Robert F. Reid. • Democrat Garry Mauro re ceived 51.2 percent of the vote for Commissioner of General Land Of fice over opponents Republican M. D. Anderson Jr. and Libertarian Homey Sue Lanham. • Democrat Jim Hightower won with 52.1 percent of the vote for Commissioner of Agriculture over Republican Bill Powers and Liberta rian Rebecca Reed. • Republican Milton E. Fox barely squeaked by with 47.9 percent of the vote over Democrat John Sharp’s 47.4 percent and Libertarian Chloe Jack Danie in the race for Railroad Commissioner. • Democrat Kent A. Caperton walked away with 100 percent of the vote in the opponent-free race for state senator, District 5. Oil prices rise after firing of Saudi leader NEW YORK (AP) — The removal M Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani as Saudi Arabia’s oil minister sent prices of crude oil and refined prod ucts soaring Thursday. Analysts attributed the reaction to i combination of technical factors ind uncertainty over the effect his departure would have on future ef forts by the Organization of Petro- eum Exporting Countries to limit production to boost world prices. Some analysts speculated Yama- li’s departure would remove a long- espected voice of moderation vithin the fractious cartel, making uture agreements to limit produc- ion and higher oil prices less likely. Others said that King Fahd’s nove smoothed the way to better co- iperation within the 13-nation car- el, which would boost chances for tigher prices in the future. At die New York Mercantile Ex- hange, contracts for December de- ivery bf West Texas Intermediate, he benchmark U.S. crude oil grade, ose$l.31 a barrel to close at $ 15.04. Prices for November deliveries Iso rose significantly. Tom Lenahan displays his Halloween creation. from his father, says it takes about three hours Lenahan, who learned how to sculpt pumpkins to carve one. Newspapers endorse governor candidates based on economy DALLAS (AP) — Texas newspa pers cited the state’s downtrodden economy as a key theme in their en dorsements in the governor’s race, and the bitterness of the campaign between Gov. Mark White and chal lenger Bill Clements concerned some editors. The Abilene Reporter-News, which endorsed Clements, sug gested the campaign styles of the two candidates were not of service to the voters. “Texans have a difficult choice in this race, not because both candi dates are highly qualified to serve as governor, but because neither has distinguished himself in a lackluster, non-informative, often dirty cam paign,” the Reporter-News said. The Lufkin Daily News declined to endorse either candidate, writing, “The final month of campaigning has been characterized by mudsling- ing TV ads geared to appeal to the intellect of the village idiot.” Several newspapers that backed Clements pointed to his experience in the private sector as a needed component in the fight to balance the state budget. “Clements is a businessman,” wrote the Beaumont Enterprise. “He understands the bottom line, ef ficiency and waste, much better than White, a man with a background in law and politics.” But the San Angelo Standard- Times, in endorsing White, said the incumbent was better suited to the state’s changing economic environ ment. “Texans live in a different state from the one they called home in 1982,” the Standard-Times said. “It is the same one in most of the ob vious ways . . . but its economy and its problems have undergone a sea of change that outdates old ap proaches to leading state govern ment.” Other newspapers backing White praised his leadership during the state’s budget shortfall. The Houston Post said White “has earned four more years by backing programs vital to this state, as well as the taxes to pay for them, in a period of severe economic hardship.”