1 ) 1 1 r r if it re- Deo ties- I-A rom I the eniy mfi- laid. r the > be 'vey, e in- ent," y at acia- n. tern- TheBattalion Vol. 87 No. 66 GSPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, December 3, 1987 Official: Dates not set to hear hazing-law case By Clark Miller Staff Writer No date has been set for the hear ings that could find some Texas A&M Corps of Cadet members juilty of violating state and Univer sity hazing laws, an A&M official laid. The hearings will be held because )f the Nov. 15 incident that left A&M senior George Russell Pulliam landcuffed and tied to a post on the University of Texas campus. Dr. Brent Paterson, student devel- tpment specialist with the Depart- nent of Student Affairs at A&M, aid letters have been sent to 22 stu- ients charging them with either di- ectly participating in the incident or if having knowledge of the incident ind not reporting it to the proper University officials. Pulliam, a member of the Corps ind the commanding officer of iquadron 10, reportedly was taken rom the A&M campus by freshman adets in his squadron. In an interview shortly after the ncident, Maj. Gen. Thomas Darling, :ommandant of the Corps, said Pull iam’s abduction was a freshman prank. “It was a case of freshmen trying to earn their Corps brass,” Darling said. Darling also added that it wasn’t something he condoned. Paterson said his office knows the students who are involved and they all have received the letters that tell them what they are charged with. However, Paterson said the names are confidential and cannot be re leased. A member of Squadron 10, Tram- pus Black, a freshman general stud ies student, declined to comment on the incident when contacted by tele phone. Black said he wasn’t involved in the incident and added that he was told not to discuss it with anybody. When asked who told him this, he said it was his commanding officer, who is Pulliam. Despite repeated efforts to reach Pulliam by phone, he hasn’t been available for comment. Paterson said that the dates of the hearings have not yet been set. Four hogs line up and try to eat grass through the fence at the Texas A&M Swine Center. nake staff lid. 9 ✓ '$ 3 iet- nst to- ormer A&M student gets vital liver transplant By Janet Goode Staff Writer John Stone, the former Texas A&M stu- ent who called upon the support of his fel- )w Aggies to raise money for a desperately ceded liver transplant, underwent surgery nd received a donated liver Tuesday. The surgery began at 9:30 Tuesday 1 ht and successfully was completed at 0 Wednesday morning. Stone now is sted in serious condition and is in the in tensive care unit at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. Susan Hall, spokesman for the medical center, said that this is typical for a trans plant patient, and that Stone is doing as well as can be expected. Hall said Stone will spend two or three days in an intensive care emit and" then three to four weeks in a regular patient room, if all goes well. Stone, 25, suffers from Alpha-1-Anti- Trypsin Deficiency, which keeps his body from controlling his digestive enzymes, re sulting in cirrhosis of the liver. “Basically, I’m digesting my own liver,” Stone told The Battalion earlier this semes ter before he was put on the donor list. The cirrhosis of his liver kept his blood from-circulating properly, so if he had not received the operation, doctors feared he would have hemorrhaged and bled to death. Scott Donahue, Stone’s friend and chair man of the John Stone Liver Transplant Fund, said about $35,000 has been raised through various channels including dona tions, leaving about $85,000 still needed to pay for the deposit on the doner waiting list. The medical center let Stone receive a donor and undergo the transplant without the full funds. Donahue said in a earlier in terview that he thinks the hospital officials realized how serious Stone’s condition was and felt pressure from the media. Stone also needs about $250,000 more to pay for the operation itself. Persons wishing to donate should write the American Transplant Association, Box 822123, Dallas, Tx. 75382-2123, or the American Transplant Association, care of the John Stone Fund, Post Oak Branch of First State Bank in Caldwell, P.O. Box 10130, College Station, Tx. 77840. the Student Senate backs plan cutting funds, health care By Drew Leder Staff Writer The Student Senate Wednes day backed a student-service fee budget proposal recommending the elimination of all-night, inpa tient care at the A.P. Beutel Health Center, an almost 98 per cent decrease in shuttle bus fund ing and no funding for the newly reated Multicultural Services Center. In what Speaker of the Senate |ay Hays called “one of the most productive meetings in three fears,” the Senate also approved. " recommending that next se mester faculty be given the option )f providing a separate final xam to graduating seniors or tempting seniors from finals. The budget proposal, written >y the Student Government Fi- lance Committee, was unani mously approved by the Senate with virtually no debate and serves as a recommendation to the Student Services office of how student service fee revenues should be allocated in the 1988- 89 school year. The budget proposal calls for a per-student increase of $2 that will bring the fees up to $67. This will increase funding for the 17 campus organizations that receive student-service fee allocations 2.35 percent to $5,070,176. The major area of funding is the health center, which is to re ceive 28.1 percent of the fees. Al though the health center’s fund ing over last year will increase almost 37 percent to $1,424,719, the Finance Committee didn’t meet the center’s request, recom mending that health care services from midnight to 8 a.m. be dis continued because they aren’t cost efficient. The proposal also calls for a 98 percent decrease in funding for the University shuttle bus service, alloting $2,000 to help fund free bonfire shuttle service. According to the budget, shuttle bus fund ing should come solely from the students who utilize the service. To make up for the lost student- service fee money, the budget suggests that the price of a bus pass be raised $10 over the next three years. Funding for the Multicultural Services Center, which was $106,000 this year, is eliminated completely. The Finance Com mittee stated that the center af fects only a small portion of stu dents, and the center’s goals — to work with and aid minorities and minority programs on campus — are duplicated in other on-cam pus services. The budget also calls for al- See Budget, page 10 &M superconducting cyclotron vill help reveal secrets of atom By Lee Schexnaider Staff Writer IThe temperature is near absolute To. Thousands of feet of super- foducting wires are coiled and liting. The electricity flows (tough the wires, causing magnetic fids to form. If the maximum ount of electricity the coils could Id was run into them, the magne- field could break the machine’s !el structural support. Naked atomic nuclei, stripped of ■ir electrons, are injected into this irling maelstrom of magnetism in- e the coils of wire. Radio waves ther accelerate the particles until y are traveling almost at the ed of light. The nuclei travel ough a vacuum and smash into a o sheet of aluminum, causing a try of atomic collisions. This is how new discoveries will be de at the new superconducting lotron at Texas A&M beginning Inday. Dr. Dave Youngblood, di- [torof the facility, said the new de- is one of only three like it in the rid, because it uses superconduct- Single Dee To radio frequency supply Ion source Graphic by Susan C. Akin ing technology in a cyclotron. The project cost $8 million, which in cluded building the cyclotron itself and the structure to house the ma chine. It will allow A&M researchers to accelerate atoms as large as ura nium — which has an atomic num ber of 92 on the periodic table of el ements. The present accelerator can only accelerate atoms up to argon, which has an atomic number of 18. Youngblood said the cyclotron won’t necessarily produce new dis coveries from planned experiments. He said researchers learn things when unexpected results arise. “It is really a success when the ex periments don’t do what you ex pect,” he said. He pointed to a book containing the proposal for the old cyclotron and said none of the new things A&M researchers discovered were in the 200-page volume. He said if they had proved all of their theories correct, they would not have learned as much. One of the experiments planned for the new cyclotron involves find ing what happens to particles that travel at the speed of sound within the nucleus of an atom. Youngblood said the speed of sound varies in dif ferent materials. For example, the speed of sound through air is differ ent than the speed of sound through wood. An experiment will study the in teractions of ions at this speed. He said A&M researchers discovered the speed of sound through atoms is one-third the speed of light using See Cyclotron, page 10 A&M leaders provide varied views of mascot proposal of Old Sarge By Shannon O’Neal Reporter A familiar “Aggie” face came to life Tuesday when a cadet in an “Old Sarge” costume strolled around the Quadrangle. Cries of disapproval and dismay came from the residence halls he passed. Some cadets called for the cos tume to be destroyed and some wanted their picture taken with the animated Old Sarge. “We need to take that monstrosity out Thursday night and do a replay of the flight of the great pumpkin,” Steve Early, cadet captain of com pany K-2, said referring to the an nual smashing of a pumpkin on the Quadrangle at Halloween. Head yell leader Doug Beall said it was the first time the costume had been in public. Beall said he picked it up from Athletic Director Jackie Sherrill Thanksgiving morning and stored it in his dorm room until Tuesday. The Battalion contacted the A&M Sports Information Office and was told they knew of no plans for such a mascot. Sherrill is out of town until Dec. 7 and could not be reached for com ment. Beall said the costume idea had first been presented to him about three weeks ago at bonfire stack. Sherrill approached Beall and the redpots with the idea of an Old Sarge costume, but he got nothing but negative feedback, Beall said. At the University of Texas foot ball game, Beall and other student leaders looked at the costume and told Sherrill it was inappropriate for use at the game. The costume was to be under stu dent control, Beall said, and would wander around outside Kyle Field and on the alumni side of the sta dium during the games. According to Beall, Sherrill said the alumni want something on their side of the field, and they feel the Old Sarge tradition is dying. Some alumni see the costume as a way to revive the tradition, he said. But Beall said the alumni feedback he has received about the costume is negative. “The consensus of the old Ags is that they want to watch the game and the students,” Beall said. “They did their yelling when they were stu dents, and if they wanted to do it now they would get tickets on the student side.” Photo by Robert W. Rizzo The Old Sarge mascot came to life Tuesday. The student leaders’ initial reac tion was complete rejection, but Beall said as the discussion contin ued, they admitted the possibility of the costume being worked into bas ketball or baseball games. Student Body President Mason Hogan said those responsible should have gotten student input earlier. “If they really wanted student in put, they could have done so much earlier and saved someone a whole lot of money and time,” Hogan said. Although many people say it will succeed because Aggies are too nice to reject it, he feels it is simply not needed. “Aggies are going to come to the game — win, lose or draw,” Hogan said. “A costume is simply not going to be a draw for a sports event. We don’t need it. We already have enough at the games with pur yell leaders, cannon, Rev and all the C.T.s in uniform running around down there. I just don’t think we need this big head stumbling See Old Sarge, page 10