Tl£ xa ^ M D ~4-4- ^ 12 ^ 1 ne tsattalion bl.82 No. 120 GSPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 24, 1987 urray will not return for final year at A&M By Homer Jacobs Sports Editor Texas A&M quarterback Kevin T$ HKiB urra y ann °unced Monday that he not return for his final year of felgibility but will make himself avail- \mwe for the 1987 National Football U*. ^ague draft this spring. \ HI The record-setting quarterback Hid in a statement released by the Athletic Department, “After [Biking with my family again, I’ve de- ||j(!ed it is in my best interest to go 1/uBiead and pursue my professional Breer at this time. H“My Aggie heart tells me to stay at ■&M and play another year, but Hgic tells me that I should move on mid test myself in the pro ranks.” I In January, Murray had said he Hould return to A&M to guide the ■ggies this fall. But A&M Coach Jackie Sherrill said that decision was ' not made by Murray on his own. Kelvin. H “I think that was more of a deci sion of Coach Sherrill and his mo ther,” Sherrill said. Sherrill also pointed to the fact that Murray would have been at A&M five years, and many of the players that he has played with (Rod Bernstine, Roger Vick, Rod Saddler) now will be moving on to the profes sional ranks. “Deep down, I can feel really how he looked at it,” he said. “He looks out there and there’s not too many people on the field anymore that he really came in with.” Sherrill said the NCAA cloud that is hovering over the A&M football program did not figure into Mur ray’s decision to leave. “That’s speculation,” he said. “It really has no bearing and never would have any bearing.” Murray will leave behind him some of the most impressive statistics ever compiled in the Southwest Con ference, including the most touch- Kevin Murray down passes (48) in a career. He also completed 546 passes for 6,549 yards during his Aggie quarterback ing days. Sherrill said he has never coached oslem kidnappers say llness may kill hostage ■aptors wont U.S. to urge releose ofArobs use fori astubk BEIRUT , Lebanon (AP) — Mos- iill votEiilm kidnappers said today American t repi 'i h 'Stage Alann Steen is sick and “may xly pres: i raemkr , "ItS IE IS." >r us in: couldc: emkeii 1 :r snide on to i Kmeni aid! I ERV lie within 10 days.” The captors of- lered to free him if the United States Iressures Israel to free 100 Arab irisoners. I A handwritten Arabic statement lelivered to the independent Beirut lewspaper An-Nahar was signed by Islaniic Jihad for the Liberation of lalestine, which holds three Ameri- lan teachers and one Indian profes- ffor. The group said Steen, a 47-year- ild Boston native and a communica- lons instructor at Beirut University ftollege, fell ill in captivity. 1 An-Nahar said the statement was Iccotnpanied by a photograph of an other hostage, Robert Polhill, a New pork City resident and professor of Iccounting at BUG, as evidence the ioaimerit was genuine. I In Stockton, Calif., Bruce Steen Said of his brother: “As far as I know, he was in good health.” He added it appeared from recent pho- lographs that his brother had lost T/eight in captivity. I The Revolutionary Justice Orga nization released a videotape of french hostage Jean-Louis Norman- in, 35. It said plans to kill him Tuesday had been canceled because of appeals from Sheik Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah and Greek Catho lic Archbishop Hilarion Capudji. Fadlallah is the most influential Shiite Moslem cleric with Lebanon’s Iranian-backed militant factions. Ca pudji was born in Syria and has close ties to the Palestine Liberation Orga nization of Yassir Arafat. In its statement, the group hold ing the four college teachers said: “We announce that American spy Alann Steen has fallen sick. Flis physical condition may deteriorate and he may die within 10 days as doctors who advised care for his con dition have said.” His brother Bruce said: “I had no idea he was sick. “Last time I saw him he was fine. The original picture I saw of him in captivity looked like he was OK, but then I saw one just a week ago, and it did look like he had lost some weight.” The statement said the group would draw up the list of names of prisoners it wants freed, along with a detailed plan for the swap, “if the American administration asked us to do this.” A previous offer to trade the four teachers for 400 Arab prisoners was uarantees of sex, grades llegedly lured SMU recruits DALLAS (AP) — Football players Southern Methodist University [lad sex with sorority women and vere guaranteed good grades through an elaborate network of boosters and students that was orga nized as early as 1979, according to ources quoted by KLIF-AM today. KLIF sports commentator Norm |Hitzges quoted unidentified sources fis saying two sorority members ini tially were paid $400 a weekend to lleep with prospective football re- Iruits. The women allegedly lured the young men with the promise of fnore sex if they signed at SMU, and they sought information about what I TV 'Other schools were offering to have * Hhem to sign, Hitzges said on his morning sports show. I Reports of grade-cheating and .urnaitf payments to female students to have Sex with athletes surfaced last week k'hen SMU officials acknowledged They were investigating “unfounded rumors” from an anonymous tipster. Those reports are the latest to sur face in the pay-for-players scandal lhat resulted in the NCAA banning lootball at SMU for 1987. I KLIF also quoted sources as say- itj ng that former Athletic Director ■ ’ pob Hitch was paid $500,000 and ^ ormer coach Bobby Collins was ^ )aid $375,000 when they resigned ast December. The pair stepped lown in the wake of the NCAA in vestigation. The radio station said Collins has »layb$ )een g uarante ed another $200,000 Q a pU Jayment in five years as long as he ioesn’t talk about the scandal or sue dlrinW ^university- . the number ot women offering iexual favors grew to “another six. eight, 10 girls involved” over a pe riod of years, Hitzges said. He said sex-for-players and the grade-fixing became known to Gov. Bill Clements and some other mem bers of the SMU Board of Gover nors, which Clements chaired before stepping down in January for his in auguration. Clements on Friday denied know ing anything about such informa tion. “I categorically deny any knowl edge whatsoever of such practices,” Clements said. “I abhor the idea of these kinds of activities if they exist, which I know nothing about.” After leaving a speaking en gagement in San Antonio this morn ing, Clements could not be located immediately for further comment. The organizer of the sex-for-ath- letes scheme has “long since left school,” Hitzges said, and the person now works for a Dallas law firm. But Hitzges said the sexual favors plan, which started in 1979-80, picked up again in 1982 with more women in volved. Hitzges said his information on the growing scandal at SMU came from one key source and that the story was verified by other sources. Besides the money, the women re ceived extra gifts, including a Mer cedes-Benz, the use of a fur coat for one year and a booster’s credit card, Hitzges said. He said the woman who received the credit card in 1983 still has it today. a quarterback that did not make the pros, and he said Murray will be no exception. “Kevin Murray has all the ingre dients,” Sherrill said. “He has an op portunity to make it.” Sherrill said the 1987 A&M foot ball squad will have a difficult time replacing Murray, the two-time Player of the Year in the SWC. “Concerning our football team, there’s no question that the shoes that have to be filled are giant ones,” he said. “But what Kevin has really given to the team are intangibles that are hard to find and hard to define — they include leadership and the determination to find a way to win. Kevin made this team awfully strong in that regard.” The Aggies now must hand the reins over to either senior Craig Stump or redshirt freshman Lance Pavlas. But Sherrill said the new quarterbacking situation would not change the team’s overall philoso phy. “I don’t think we ever lower our goals,” he said. “We’re going to have to do some different things. But we’re not going to change our offen se.” A&M offensive coordinator Lynn Amedee, who was instrumental in developing Murray’s skills, said the time was right for Murray to head for the pros. “I think he did the right thing,” Amedee said. “ What can he do that he hasn’t done? He’s taken us to two Cotton Bowls, and he’s been Player of the Year the last two years.” Amedee said the Aggie football team, and Stump and Pavlas in par ticular, will have to work extra hard during the five-week spring drills to make up for Murray’s absence, but the team would not rest on Murray’s laurels. Stump, who led the Aggies to two withdrawn since the Israelis refused to negotiate and the United States did not pressure them to do so. The other two kidnapped teach ers are Jesse Turner, 39, of Boise, Idaho, and Mithileshwar Singh, 60, an Indian who has resident alien sta tus in the United States. Normandin said in the videotape from Revolutionary Justice that his kidnappers put him on trial and “I was judged and accused. . . . The sentence is suspended for the time being, thanks to Fadlallah and Ca pudji.” The four-minute tape was delivered to a Western news agency in West Beirut. A statement from the group last week claimed Normandin confessed to spying for the French and Israeli secret services. He was kidnapped March 8, 1986. Two Saudi Arabian hostages were freed in West Beirut last week, a month after Syria sent 7,500 troops there to stop a war between rival mi litias. There has been speculation that Syria obtained the releases of the Saudis in return for King Fahd urging Britain to resume relations with President Hafez Assad’s gov ernment. Mirror, Mirror Photo by Dean Saito Windows in the New Chemistry Building show off a reflection of the O&M Building in Monday’s bright sunlight. The day started out with rain, but had cleared up by early afternoon. straight upset victories over Texas Christian and Texas at the end of the 1984 season while Murray was injured, said Murray’s exit is a new motivational factor for the quar terback from Port Arthur Jefferson. “It’ll help you wake up in the morning,” Stump said. Stump’s rude awakening came af ter two years of backing up Murray. “People say good things happen to those who wait,” he said. “I have to have a good spring for me and my teammates so maybe they can build some confidence in me.” Pavlas, who was one of the most highly regarded quarterbacks to ever come out of the Texas high school ranks, just finished his first day of spring drills and was concentrating on trying to adjust to the new activ ities. “I’m just trying to do my best and let nature take its course,” Pavlas said. Controversy over bomber doesn't faze flight crew ABILENE (AP) — Reporters from across the country watched demonstrations of the controversial new B-1B bomber Monday and talked with its flight crew during Media Day at Dyess Air Force Base. Following months of increasingly critical reports from Capitol Hill re garding the B-1B and Us effective ness, about 50 reporters from major newspapers and television networks got a look at the bomber and talked to some of the airmen who man it. Because of problems with some of the plane’s critical equipment, the Air Force on Feb. 23 placed special restrictions on flight maneuvers of the bird-like, low-altitude, high speed aircraft that is designed to penetrate enemy defenses and fill the gap between the old B-52s and the super high-tech Stealth bomber. Capt. Fred Strain, one of five crew members on the initial flight of the B-1B that ended in a 300 niph land ing on a desert runway at Edwards Air Force Base in California on March 10, 1986, told newsmen that on that one mission he had “all the problems I want to have for the rest of my career.” The landing was the fastest pow ered aircraft landing ever made. Strain’s plane — the “Star of Abi lene” — had a malfunction and the sweep wings only would move to a 55-degree angle, far short of the 15 to 25 degrees desired for landing. The crew noticed the problem over the Brownwood area only a half hour into their first training mission. “We weren’t really sure what was going to happen,” Strain recalls. “Nobody had really landed that fast. I think we had anticipated landing on the runway and rolling off onto the dry lake bed because we didn’t think we were going to stop.” Once the brakes were applied, the plane stopped within about 12,000 feet, he said, with 3,000 or 4,000 feet of runway remaining. “It stopped just super,” he said. “But, I had never seen the sagebrush go by that fast on the landing be fore.” Col. Robert Dempsey, the com mander of the 96th Bomb Wing at Dyess, defended the special restric tions imposed on crews training on the BIB. The limitations are nec essary, he said, until all systems on the plane can be thoroughly tested. Economist: Sales tax on semces could cut jobs By Melanie Perkins Staff Writer An estimated 42,700 Texans could lose their jobs if a proposal to extend the state sales tax to the service sector is passed, a Bryan-College Station economist says. Economic consultant Donald House says this is a conservative estimate of what the job reduction could be in the service sector, as suming the cost of products remained the same and the added expenses from the taxes were not passed on to the consumer. How ever, House says he believes this ultimately will happen. “It’s going to touch the entire economy and it is very difficult to predict the entire structu ral burden of the tax simply because of the multiple levels of taxation and the interac tions across markets,” House says. The proposal, submitted by State Comp troller Bob Bullock, calls for the extension of the state sales tax to include services — both professional services such as those offered by lawyers and accountants, and personal serv ices such as hairdressing and dog grooming — in the tax base. Persons providing professional services may choose whether they will itemize tax on their bills or bill on a “tax included” basis as goods merchants currently do. According to reports released by Bullock’s office, the 4.5 percent sales tax rate on these services would place Texas fourth among the most populous states in terms of state and lo cal taxes. Raising the state sales tax rate to bring in the same amount of money would cause Texas to have the highest combined state and local sales tax rate in the country. Tony Proffitt, director of tax information, says the Legislature is going to have to raise some money to help pull the state out of an estimated $5.8 billion budget deficit. “This is an alternative the comptroller had proposed so the Legislature will not have to impose an income tax on Texas residents,” Proffitt says. House’s study was prepared for groups representing certified public accountants, lawyers, architects, doctors, real estate agents, chiropractors, engineers and insurance agents. Speaking for the study sponsors, Austin lawyer Mark Hanna told the Associated Press the pending proposal is not the way to go. While the service industry was willing to pay its “fair share” of state taxes, Hanna said, the wider sales tax was not a good idea. House said that, although most states have a sales tax, only three states in the United States — Hawaii, New Mexico and South Da kota — extend taxes to the service sector in the way Bullock’s proposal would. In early U.S. history, he says, states had tried this kind of tax in various forms and in general rejected it. He also found four Euro pean countries — France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands — who tried and rejected this type of tax. There are other states besides Texas acti vely considering extending taxes to services, Proffitt says. For example, the Indiana legis lature recently passed a bill to extend taxes to services, he says. “The exact same bill Mr. Bullock has writ ten was taken by the governor of the state of Washington and introduced in its legislature with very good results,” he says. House says even exempt services such as health, agriculture and food are subject to taxation at their lower levels. “You look at hospitals and you find their accounting services will go up in price, their legal services will go up in price, their custo dial services will go up in price and you can go on and on and on,” says House. “Whereas you may be trying to exempt them on the services they charge, you aren’t exempting See Sales Tax, page 12