H »• ) 1 The Battalion lol. 82 No. 133 GSPS 045360 16 pages Colleae Station, Texas Friday, April 10, 1987 &M releases findings of football probe Report makes no mention of published allegations against Murray, A8dVI grad Dockery Photo by Tracy Staton Ine Stephenson, director of Texas A&M’s Office of public Infor mation, releases the investigation of the football program Thursday. By Frank Smith Senior Staff Writer Texas A&M officials, complying with newspaper requests and an at torney general’s directive, on Thurs day released the results of the school’s in-house investigation of its football program. Sort of. Some 820 pages of the report were released to the public. Officials have estimated that the full report, which the school released to the NCAA last August, spans some 2,000 pages. Absent from the report issued Thursday are any direct references to quarterback Kevin Murray or Dal las booster Rod Dockery. The investigation was initiated in late 1985 after published reports al leged possible NCAA rules infrac tions. Included among those allegations was a report that Dockery paid Mur ray $3,550 in 1983-84 for cleaning printing presses — work which two of Dockery’s former employees have told NCAA officials Murray never performed. Murray has announced he will not return to A&M for his final year of eligibility. A&M President Frank Vandiver, in a brief written statement issued with the report, cited the attorney general’s contention that portions of the report concerning specific stu dents are subject to the Family Edu cational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, and thus can be withheld. Those segments mentioning stu dents’ names were deleted. According to the report, the in vestigation yielded no evidence of a “pattern of conscious or willful viola tion” of NCAA or Southwest Con ference rules and regulations by ei ther alumni or present and former members of the A&M football staff. “Nonetheless,” the report said, “we have found several instances where NCAA rules and regulations were, or may have been, violated ei ther intentionally, unwittingly or through a lack of knowledge.” At least six examples of such in stances were given. It was unknown whether there were any other examples since more than a half page following the sixth item was left blank, meaning additio nal items may have been deleted. The deletions left details sketchy, so much so that only two items could be reasonably understood. Those items reported that: • Former assistant coach Jess Stiles loaned $60 to (name deleted from report), and $50 eventually was repaid. • Some violations of the NCAA, SWC and University complimentary ticket policy were found. The viola tions primarily involved former scholarship players. “Evidence . . . included selling the tickets through the newspaper, hav ing a girlfriend sell them, having trainers sell them or meeting un identified alumni in the dressing room,” the report said. The report contained statements from 15 people, including A&M alumnus Tom Poynor, who was quoted in a Dec. 15, 1985, Dallas Times Herald article as saying he made annual contributions of about $5,000 to a “football slush fund” at A&M. The article quoted comments Poynor made during a divorce depo sition. In the report, however, Poynor said he has never given any money to a football slush fund. “I was thinking only of total money that I gave to Texas A&M and I said approximately $5,000,” he said. When asked why he didn’t correct the phrasing of the “slush fund” question at the time it was posed to him, Poynor said, “Yes, it was a very hostile divorce deposition and I hon estly did not catch his use of the words.” In addition to the statements, the report contained a variety of docu ments, including some 486 pages of material that was already accessible See Report, page 16 bgan garners victory in presidential election )adet draws 65 percent of votes in runoff By Chrisd Daugherty [ Staff Writer ■Mason Hogan won Wednesday’s Hnoff election for student body Besident, defeating his opponent, Biles Bradshaw, by a healthy per- Bntage. ■Hogan, a senior agricultural edu- ■tion/animal science major from in Hyde, garnered 65 percent of the mm votes cast, winning with 1,259 Ivotes, while Bradshaw earned 35 ■rcent or 677 votes. ■ 2,019 votes were cast overall in the ■e ct > on . which is an increase of 3«t400 votes from last year’s run- m. ^JComing into the runoffs, Hogan mad led the primary election with 27 H ■rcent of those votes to Bradshaw’s ;1/ percent. I But Hogan, a member of the I larps of Cadets, admitted he’d had H Ime reservations during the early II nit of this week. He said he was |iv()iried that the Corps would be jBimplacent after his earlier success mid not turn out to vote in the run- Bf election. ■ “I did (relax) for a while after the iKrst election, but then I started • thinking that if the Corps didn’t vote B’d be beaten,” Hogan said. ■ Hogan ran primarily on the plat- Bonn of abolishing finals for grad uating seniors, and said he plans to ■fgin working on that as soon as he Itakes office in the next few weeks. Mason Hogan A 24-hour health center and a stu dent member of the Board of Re gents were also issues he cam paigned on heavily, and he said he plans to pursue both before the cur rent semester ends. “We’ll probably just get started on the Board of Regents idea, but I’ve already started talking to some peo ple about the health center,” he said. Bradshaw, who was accused of overspending by six of the other presidential candidates, outlined what he said he’d learned was the only sure way to win an A&M elec tion. “I hope that anyone who plans on running for student body president has taken heed of how to win the po litical game,” Bradshaw said. “Rule 1: Accuse your opponent of anything. “Rule 2: Be a member of a large group that sticks together, regard less. “Rule 3: Smile until it hurts. “Unfortunately, I only paid atten tion to Rule 3.” Hogan said he plans to talk to Mike Sims, the current student body president, within the next week. He will take office shortly thereafter. In other races: • Doug Beall was selected head yell leader. • Class of ’88 treasurer: Chris Yancy •Class of ’89 president: Denise Arledge • Class of ’90 president: Dan Gat- tis • Class of ’90 vice-president: Mi chael Campbell • Krueger/Mosher senator: Jody Manier • College of Agriculture grad uate senator: Robert Berg • College of Medicine graduate senator: Scott Brooks • College of Architecture Grad uate Council: J. Tim Potter, Kim Stine, Anne Hurley, Augustin Agroz and two candidates tied for the final position in the Graduate Council: Alfredo Tellez-Giron, Martin Wells. Election Commissioner Derek Blakeley said the tie would be solved by the Graduate Council, and that there would not be another runoff. ».i f I ;■ Nose To The Grindstone Photo by Bill Hughes Tom Wilhoit grinds mortar from between the ing’s renovation. The grinding is the first part of a bricks of the Physics Building as part of the build- process used to replace the old mortar. House approves $1 trillion budget, proposes tax hike Counseling service overloaded; new clients won’t be accepted WASHINGTON (AP) — The |House on Thursday approved a fl trillion Democratic budget [that would raise $18 billion in taxes, slash President Rea- jgan's military buildup and block IWhite House plans for sharp de- Icreases in domestic programs. The House endorsed the plan Idrafted by its Budget Committee, 1230-192, with no Republicans Ivoting for it. “The resolution today adopts a [very solid budget which many leconomists believe can make a [difference between continued [economic growth in the United [States and economic stagnation,” [said Speaker Jim Wright, D- |Texas. But most lawmakers conceded [the blueprint would fail to meet [the $108 billion deficit target of Jthe Gramm-Rudman budget-bal- [ancing law. Democrats argued it [did more to cut red ink than any [other option, including the presi- Idenfs. Rep. Lynn Martin, R-Ill., said it |made Democratic priorities clear [to the voters. “All you care about [is cutting defense and raising [taxes,” she told the majority [party. “The American people now know what they elected.” The House plan features a call for $18 billion in unspecified new taxes plus $1 billion from in creased tax enforcement and an other $2 billion from fees and premiums for government serv ices. Overall, it claims $38 billion in taxes and spending cuts toward reducing the deficit, compared with $36 billion in the White House plan. Reagan has threatened to veto any tax rate increase, and Wright said he wasn’t sure the Congress could override him. “If the presi dent is determined to obstruct deficit reduction, he can do that,” he said. Reagan submitted a budget with less than one-third that much in new taxes, mostly with technical changes in the law. But he proposed raising a similar money total with heavy reliance on selling government assets. The president’s domestic spending cut plans, including the elimination of dozens of federal programs, were unacceptable to the lawmakers. In a symbolic vote, the House rejected Reagan’s budget, 394-27. By Daniel A. La Bry Staff Writer Texas A&M’s Student Counseling Service is having a crisis. Due to an overload of students seeking assistance, the service has been forced to stop accepting new clients for continuing personal coun seling, a service administrator said. Dr. Kerry Hope, associate direc tor of counseling services, said the service hit the crisis stage last week after intake service appointments had its counselors booked for up to three weeks. That left no room for continuing personal counseling. To make every hour available for student counseling, the service also has stopped all of its outreach pro grams, such as stress management workshops and assertiveness train ing. The intake system allows counsel ors to meet with students as quickly as possible, spend a full hour with them and assess what they need, whether it be a one-time visit, group therapy, or a referral. But Hope stressed that Student Counseling Service is not cutting its emergency services or academic and career services. “The one thing that we are always providing is emergency crisis serv ices during the daytime,” she said. “That will never change.” Comparison of New Clients 300 ■ 1986 0 1987 Jan Feb Months Mar Emergency walk-in crisis inter vention services are still being pro vided from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on week days for individuals in a crisis situation — immediate decisions of great importance, fear of harming oneself or somebody else or severe depression. The service also will continue its academic and career services be cause of their importance to the aca demic community. “This (the overload) is not an un usual occurence,” Hope said. “It commonly gets to this point, but it’s usually right at the end of April or November (in the fall). “We are a full month ahead of schedule this time.” The staff usually is able to handle the overload for two weeks at the end of a semester, she said, but six is impossible. Why the unusual overload? The service isn’t sure, but Hope said there has been an overall in crease in students as compared to the same time last year. The staff has experienced a 35- percent increase in new clients, jumping from 171 last March to 224 this March. Total sessions at the counseling service increased from 801 last March to 1,015, a 25-per- cent increase. “It’s a scary situation,” Hope said. “We don’t have the chance to do a lot of preventive mental health kind of things that we would like to do — getting out and doing stress manage ment workshops and things like that. “That is part of what we had to cut out in order to see more clients.” At the end of March, counseling services had about 40 people on the waiting list, she said. “We’re not even putting people on the waiting list now,” she said. “We don’t feel it would be fair to a student to say, ‘You’re going to get in.’ The likelihood is that they won’t. “We think we will be able to han dle everybody who is currently on the waiting list.” The counseling service staff con sists of 13 full-time counselors, four administrative counselors, five part- time, unpaid practicum counselors and two one-day-a-week psychia trists. Texas A&M, with an enrollment of 36,000, has 24 counseling staff members. In comparison, Hope said Iowa State University, with an enrollment of 10,000, has about the same num ber of counseling staff members as A&M does. The University of Texas has somewhere between 100 and 150 people on the counseling services staff with an enrollment of 48,000 students, she said. See Counsel, page 16