wm'nm Texas a&n\ ">% mm The Battalion College Station, Texas Monday, September 7, 1987 thletic rivalry sparks fights on field Police arrest 1SU students ifter game By Clark Miller Staff Writer Four Louisiana State University fiudents were arrested Saturday ^ght after the Texas A&M and LSU otball game and several others ;re taken to jail and then released. The students that were arrested ;re charged with assault, public in dication and/or disorderly con- said Bob Wiatt, director of [niversity Police at A&M. The arrests were made after the lime when several Louisiana State [niversity students left the bleach- and ran onto the field, after the iblic address announcer requested ^at everyone stay off Kyle Field. The LSU students on the field Here taunting A&M fans and waving Hags and an obscene sign. I Katie Matzinger, a senior at A&M, fid the LSU students on the field :re looking for a fight. “They have as much school spirit A&M,” she said. “But things just bt out of hand." Doug Beall, head yell leader for |&M, said there were no major roblems until the LSU fans ran ito the field. “I saw people yelling and shouting each other until the LSU fans tlent onto the field,” Beall said. ’[Then all hell broke loose.” Wiatt said there was a lot of unrest the stadium throughout the game. “The LSU crowd was rather dis- ^mperant in behavior,” he said. Many of the LSU students were (linking in the stands and most of lie students on the field after the [ame were drunk, he said. He said the actions of the LSU kowd were a disgrace. “They were acting like a bunch of iphomores in high school,” Wiatt aided. ■ Beall, a senior, said Saturday ■ight was the only time he had seen fights after an A&M football game. I Although some A&M students fought with LSU students after the game, Wiatt said the A&M crowd tjras well-behaved. T was proud of the A&M student |ody because they ignored the Hunts,” Wiatt said. - Photo by Doug LaRue Bryan Police arrest a Louisiana State University fan after he ran onto Kyle Field and resisted police attempts to remove him. No A&M students were arrested or taken into custody. Matzinger said the A&M students kept away from the LSU students and let the police take care of the problems. Wiatt said that six LSU students were taken to jail but released with no charges when sober friends promised to take them straight to Louisiana. The four students who were ar rested were bailed out by friends the same night, he said. Beall said that there were no fights at midnight yell practice Fri day, but there were a few shoving matches between students. There were more than 40,000 people at yell practice and is believed to be the largest ever at A&M. “I’m for moving the game to a neutral site,” Beall said. “It can only get worse.” Wiatt said that he is just glad the LSU students are gone. “Thank goodness they’ve gone back to Louisiana,” he said. Official says disabled should avoid Mass site CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — Worshippers who use wheel chairs shouldn’t attend Pope John Paul ll’s Mass service Sun day in San Antonio unless they registered two months ago for special transportation, a church official said. “For somebody in a wheel chair, I don’t think it’s realistic to decide at the last minute they want to go,” Sister Robin Connell, chairman of the papal visit’s dis abled persons committee, said. “This is a rather major event,” she told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. “For somebody to decide on Sept. 4 or 5 they want to go, that’s not terribly realistic,” she said. But a priest who he ads the Di ocese of Corpus Christi’s Office for Persons with Disabilities said he disagrees. “If I were a disabled person and I hadn’t really registered, I would go and take a chance,” the Rev. David Walsh said. “I find it difficult to believe they would turn back people,” he said. “They can’t.” Sister Connell said 550 dis abled people, about 115 of them in wheelchairs, met a July 31 deadline to register. Shuttles offered by the Arch diocese of San Antonio to the Mass site are provided for those attending in wheelchairs. Walsh said the original regis tration deadline was July 1. Walsh will be traveling to the Mass with nearly 200 local hand icapped people, only three or four of them in wheelchairs. The deadline for the hand icapped registration yyas. . ex r tended to July 31 to allow more to sign up, archdiocese officials said. Elizabeth Bingham, commu nications coordinator for VIA Metropolitan Transit, said shuttle buses for the general public at 10 park-and-ride stations around the city will not be equipped to handle wheelchairs. The area at the Mass site desig nated for the disabled is near one side of the altar, and has been cleared of large rocks and debris, for easier maneuverability. AM student speaks on TV about high cost of education By Cindy Milton Staff Writer I It isn’t every day students from Texas A&M are chosen to appear on national tele vision, but last week when an ABC news crew came to the campus to tape a story on the cost and quality of higher education, A&M freshman Brenda Smith was in front of the camera representing A&M. I Smith, a biomedical sciences major and national merit scholar from Houston, spoke briefly about the high cost of education on /“This Week With David Brinkley,” which aired Sunday afternoon. P Before entering A&M, Smith turned down an offer of admission to the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, mainly due to the higher cost of the Ivy League school. “With the scholarship I have here,” Smith said in a Battalion phone interview, “I’m paying a lot less than I would have if I had gone to the University of Pennsylvania. “It was a much more reasonable decision to come here.” She added that she wants to go to vet school and that A&M is a good choice for her future plans. Sunday’s program also included com ments by A&M President Frank E. Van diver and faculty and students from Yale University. The two main concerns of the program were the rising cost of college and the qual ity of education university students receive. Anchorman David Brinkley commented on the mounting costs of higher education and suggested that there is “too much money spent on too little education.” The program also showed some not-too- impressive statistics on the lower education standards held by high school graduates in the United States. Guests Allan Bloom and E.B. Hirsch, both authors of current bestselling books concerning education in America, com mented on the mediocrity in schools today. Bloom’s “Closing an American Mind” discusses the abandonment of “the classics for trendy things” in colleges and universi ties. “We’ve given up hope,” Bloom said. He feels the concept of “learning to lead the good life” through higher education has disappeared. Hirsch, author of “Cultural Literacy,” feels the decline in the quality of education has roots in primary school. “It’s elemen tary education that determines who is going to be a college graduate,” he said. Hirsch also stressed that the nation’s primary schools are too concerned with teaching students skills. “There used to be a tradition in this country that once you reach second ary education, you would let the market place of ideas decide what you would do,” he said. However, Lynne Cheney, chairman for the National Endowment for Humanities, said the purpose of going to college is to learn to ask “those human questions” — then a person goes into the job world. Despite the realm of ideas about the pur pose of higher education, the general con census of the speakers was that American colleges and universities are not teaching the qualities and values they used to. James Freeman, president of Dartmouth College, said, “College should give students capacities to improve the mind — open a channel to the soul. Students need to learn to think critically and to be tolerant of oth ers’ views and values.” Soviets produce brochures to warn people about AIDS MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Health Ministry has produced 5 million brochures warning about the spread of the deadly AIDS vi rus and has begun distributing them in the capital. The information campaign, begun over the weekend, shows the increasing seriousness with which the government is tackling AIDS, or acquired immune defi ciency syndrome. A year ago the state-run Soviet news media described AIDS as a scourge resulting from the deca dent behavior of Westerners. The Soviet press also said the virus was the product of secret germ warfare research in the United States. The new Health Ministry bro chure, entitled “What You Need To Know About AIDS,” takes a direct and non-political approach to explaining the virus — how it can be contracted and how to avoid exposure. The Russian-language pamph let so far has been delivered only to two compounds for foreigners. But the number of brochures printed suggests the ministry in tends to eventually deliver them to every household in Moscow, a city of 9 million. According to the circulation figure printed on the back of the pamphlet, 5 million were pro duced. Threats to public health, such as the annual influenza epidemics that sweep Moscow, are usually addressed in newspaper articles and on bulletin boards of clinics and hospitals. But a health warn ing as detailed and mass-pro duced as the AIDS brochure was believed to be unprecedented. AIDS is a fatal disease in which a virus attacks the body’s immune system, leaving victims suscepti ble to a wide variety of infections and cancers. It is most often transmitted through sexual con tact. Sharing of contaminated hy podermic needles or syringes by intravenous drug abusers is an other major means of transmis sion. No cure for AIDS is known. The brochure says those facing the highest risk of contracting AIDS are male homosexuals. Homosexual contact is a crime in the Soviet Union, punishable by up to five years in a corrective labor camp. The Soviet government issued a decree Aug. 25 that authorizes forced testing of anyone in the Soviet Union when “there are grounds for assuming that they are infected with the AIDS virus.” The decree set penalties for those who knowingly expose oth ers to the virus. “Deliberate exposure of an other person to the danger of be ing infected with AIDS shall be punished with up to five years in prison,” the decree said. The prison term can be as much as eight years if a known AIDS carrier infects another per son. Iran accuses U.S. of pressuring Kuwait into expelling diplomats MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Iran said Sunday the United States pres sured Kuwait into ordering five Ira nian diplomats expelled. Six U.S. mine sweepers meanwhile steamed toward the Persian Gulf to help pro tect reflagged Kuwaiti tankers. Vernon Walters, U.S. envoy to the United Nations, said Iran — “if any body there is thinking logically at all” — would accept a cease-fire when U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar travels to the region this week. In another development, Iran an nounced it was releasing 100 Iraqi risoners of war and proposed that oth sides release certain prisoners held for more than five years in the 7-year-old Iran-Iraq war. Kuwait on Saturday ordered the five Iranians to leave the country within a week and complained that Iran fired a missile at the Kuwaiti coast on Friday. Iran considers Ku wait an ally of Iraq. Kuwait says it is neutral. Iran’s prime minister, Hussein Musavi, said Kuwait was too weak to expel the five on its own and was only obeying “that which is dictated upon it by other governments,” according to Iran’s official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Cyprus. “Persian Gulf governments are permanent neighbors which should care more about good relations with each other than relations with the United States,” Musavi said. U.S. warships began July 21 to es cort 11 Kuwaiti tankers through the gulf- Until now, mine sweeping opera tions in the gulf have been carried out by helicopters based aboard the U.S. assault carrier Guadalcanal. Kuwait on Saturday told Perez de Cuellar that Iran was guilty of hos tile acts that merited U.N. action. It pointed to the missile attack Fri day and an earlier Iranian attack on a Kuwaiti freighter in the gulf. It said it was withholding other griev ances to avoid complicating the U.N. leader’s efforts to bring about a cease-fire. Witnesses said Friday’s missile crashed in sand near an empty beach house just south of the Al-Ahmadi oil terminal, where two U.S.-re flagged Kuwaiti tankers were moored for loading. They said it caused minor damage. Kuwait-based shipping officials and a senior gulf government offi cial said it was a Chinese-built Silk worm, fired from Iranian-held terri tory in Iraq’s Faw peninsula, about 50 miles away. Kuwaiti Defense Minister Sheik Salem Al-Sabah told a Cabinet meet ing Sunday the missile was made in China, but he did not call it a Silk worm, reported Rashed Abdel Aziz Al-Rashed, the minister of state for Cabinet affairs. Al-Rashed told reporters the Cab inet endorsed the expulsion of Ira nian diplomats and called Iranian threats to Kuwaiti territory “one of the most dangerous manifestations of escalation in the gulf region.” Three Kuwaiti tankers outfitted with U.S. flags and escorted by U.S. warships left the gulf through the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday. The seventh convoy of the reflagging op eration made what U.S. officials said was another “uneventful” journey.