Friday, October 2, 1987/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local nic reshman cadets spur tradition Respite SMU season probation but scientis hie big one gawaited.Tlii; By Amy Young 6-1 earthqualf Reporter ig one will I; An old Texas A&M Corps of Ca ron their I B ts tra didon — the wearing of bot- .. T 3 * K-cap “spurs” by freshman Corps nines of Los iiembers — has a new’ twist this year, t the big one I The spurs traditionally were worn 0 Derrent El 'h 6 freshman cadets throughout ^ • Be week preceding the A&M-South- Bn Methodist University football ■me, said Erik Jackson, a junior En- s a beautiful i sh and P hil osophy major and • i , ’ Bember of the Aggie Band. mish school, II| 00. I’llcontintti ^ owever ’ has been placed il . B probation by the NCAA, which eSan leans there will be no 1987-1988 But I won’t football season for SMU. But the i comes thetawT 5 decided 10 continue the tradi- he beast B n ^ wear ' n g die spurs this week tor Saturday's game against Texas ior journals If ch University. Battalion. Blhe Red Raiders’ mascot rides a Birse, so the idea in w’earing the bot- B-cap spurs is to “spur” the Aggies onto victory, Jackson said. jGary Hendershot, a freshman in If band, says the spurs are con- lucted with wire coat hangers and |ttened bottle caps, varying from Bitfit to outfit. Most of the bottle Bps are collected from "bottle-cap Hey,’’ next to the Dixie Chicken tav ern at Northgate. Photo by Sam Myers Junior Ralph Parman, standing at far right, of Company E-l, waits for some freshmen to put on their spurs before going to lunch. J J Hendershot said most outfits pre fer to reflect the year of their grad- idng class by placing that number caps on the spurs. For example, [is year’s freshman class is the Class .'91, so the freshman cadets are faring 91 bottle caps — either 46 one and 45 on the other, or as My as 91 on each spur. “Outfits try to make their spurs Biiform,” Hendershot said. “One lay of doing this is by painting the bale caps all the same color, such as fcyal blue (the freshman class color) (maroon and white.” Jibe commanding officer of each lorps unit decides how the spurs be designed, but the freshmen j must construct the spurs t hemselves, with virtually no help from the up perclassmen. “Mr. Jackson, our 1st sergeant, showed us his freshman spurs,” Hendershot said. “He said, ‘All right, fish, I’ll give you permission to scope out my spurs,’ and held them up so we could see how they were made.” In order to organize the design of the spurs, Hendershot said, the freshmen had “bottlecap” last Sun day night and discussed ways in which they might be made. “We can’t go anywhere outside without our spurs,” he said. “We’re supposed to take them off just be fore we enter a building and place them back on when we leave. When a freshman cadet is caught without his spurs, he is usually issued a de merit.” Accumulation of demerits can bring some type of punishment from Corps upperclassmen, Hendershot said, such as having to walk the perimeter of the “bull- ring,” a designated area behind Dorm 9, for two hours. “If one of the spurs breaks while the cadet is somewhere on campus, he must remove the other spur and ‘wildcat’ all the way back to his dorm,” he said. Troy Johnson, a freshman in the band, said the spurs draw a lot of at tention and questions on campus. “A lot of non-regs ask about our spurs,” Johnson said. “They proba bly think (the spurs) are stupid, but to them the Corps is just a big game. “It’s a tradition. It can be a pain, but it can also be a lot of fun, if you let it.” The freshman spurs, he said, are symbolic of the transition that takes place between a cadet’s freshman and senior years in the Corps. “It’s just helping prepare you for when you wear your senior boots,” Johnson said. “You can hardly wait to get through the week, but when the week’s over, you can look for ward to reaching your senior year and wearing your real spurs.” Committee promotes supercollider plan included on ballot By Doug Driskell Staff Writer Funding for the superconduc tor supercollider is one of the eight proposals on the Nov. 3 ballot the Build Texas Commit tee is promoting, a spokesman for the committee said Thursday at a press conference at Eas- terwood Airport. If Proposition 19 is approved, $500 million in general obliga tion bonds will be appropriated to help convince the federal gov ernment to locate the project in Texas, said Tom Vickers, Bexar County Judge and chairman of the Build Texas Committee. These bonds will be issued only if the state is awarded the project, he said. Economic propositions 4-8, 11 and 23 also are sponsored by the committee, he said. If voted into law, it is estimated that the prop ositions would create more than 60,000 jobs and increase statewide income by almost $6 billion. “Collectively, the heart of the program is a $1.9 billion bond package for various projects such as state prisons, water pro jects, local public works, the su percollider and the agriculture fund,” he said. “If it is passed in its entirety, it will put some 60,000 Texans back to work,” he said. “This is at a time where there are over 700,000 Texans out of jobs,” Vickers said. According to a booklet put out by the Build Texas Commit tee, Proposition No. 7 allows for state bonds for local public works projects. This proposition may help Bryan-College Station, Vickers said. “What this does is allow local communities to, in essence, sort of piggyback on the state’s credit rating,” he said. “They really borrow money from the state, so they have to repay it, “But, because the state has a strong credit rating it will cost the taxpayers less interest.” Vickers is traveling statewide to clarify the purpose of these propositions, he said. “Part of the problem, that we perceive, from the ballot stand point, is the fact that there are more propositions on the ballot than ever before in the history of Texas,” he said. “This could have a tendency to be confusing to the average voter,” he said. “So, we are try ing to get the word out concern ing the importance of this pack age of eight Constitutional amendments.” There are 25 constitutional amendment propositions and two referendums on the ballot, Vickers said. The committee faces no orga nized opposition, Vickers said. Voter apathy and voter igno rance over the issues are the only kinds of opposition the commit tee faces. The committee was initiated by Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby, he said. It has grown from his initiating action and the legislative action that produced the propositions, he said. Any proposition that is listed on the ballot must be passed by a two-thirds majority vote in both the Senate and the House. Correction An article in Thursday’s At Ease incorrectly said that the lot now occupied by the Cow Hop Expansion previously was occu pied by the Sundance Club. The space previously was occupied by the Sunset Grill. en £0, walking Familiar sigh ger friends ^ ion. Even ets Fridaf^i ng but no! ice all right Is with some ne yells. Great, silent. And tkt ig band in the niliar first th [ « And I lost it Particularly us Aggie 5 ' or female- rt, tall, vide 01 ig here whet or most all No matter ; we are gon uething f° r l iapes us, ogether. ing Spirit |4iutl Introducing the Pizza j '-Hut mmm ou’re forced has no* is 00 his ^ cola, PIZZA HUT DELIVERY AGGIE SPECIAL 2 Medium Cheese Pizzas for $9" or 2 Large Cheese Pizzas for $12" Pan or Thin-n~crispy NO COUPON NECESSARY Extra toppi n g S Medium $.99, covers both pizzas! a rge $1.49, covers both pizzas! CALL 693-9393 MSC NOm’S MINI WARGAMING CONVENTION! COMING OCT 3, 4, & 5 TOURNAMENTS WILL INCLUDE AD&D, CAR WARS, NUKE WAR, SQUAD LEADER, STAR FLEET BATTLES, CHAMPIONS, AND MORE! NOVACON WILL ALSO FEATURE A FULLY STOCKED DEALERS’ ROOM, INCLUDING GAMES, MINIATURES, COMICS, AND MORE! ADMISSION: $4.00 FOR ALL THREE DAYS TICKETS WILL BE SOLD IN ROOM 203 OF THE MSC FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL MSC NOVA AT 845-1515 4.L ^Tr CO-OP CARRER FAIR Monday, October 5, 1987, the employers listed will be on campus participating in the Co-op Career Fair. These employers will primarily be interested in hiring co-op students, but if your are interested in either summer or full-time employment, please feel free to come by. The Co-op Career Fair will be held be tween 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. with a lunch break from 12:10 to 1:00. EMPLOYER BOOTH LOCATION ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES-Austin Zachry CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY-Washington D.C. Zachry E-SYSTEMS-Greenville Zachry FT. HOOD-Killeen Zachry GENERAL DYNAMICS-Ft. Worth Zachry IBM-Houston Zachry JOHNSON CONTROLS-Irving Zachry KIMBERLY CLARK-Paris Zachry LTV MISSILES & ELECTRONICS-Dallas Zachry MCNEIL CONSUMER PRODUCTS-Round Rock Zachry NABISCO-Houston Zachry NALCO-Sugarland New Chemistry Bldg. NASA-JOHNSON SPACE CENTER-Houston Zachry NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY-Ft. Meade, MD Zachry UNION CARBIDE-Texas City Zachry TEXAS INSTRUMENTS-Dallas Zachry TEXAS INSTRUMENTS (DSEG)-Dallas Zachry TRANE COMPANY-Tyler Zachry Battalion Classified 845-2611