1 ne oattalion Vo!. 87 No. 84 CJSPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Friday, January 29,1988 School to move football games Kyle Field By Drew Leder Stuff Writer ■ Kyle Field is no longer home to the A&M Consolidated High School football team. ■ At the request of Texas A&M’s Athletic Department, the A&M Con- Blidated Tigers, who have been ■aying their Friday night games at flyle Field for the past six years, will be finding a new playing l|e, Assistant Athletic Director Wal- ice Groff said. I Groff said he, along with Athletic Director Jackie Sherrill and Billy ■ckard, an assistant director, re quested after the Fall 1987 season Hat A&M Consolidated discontinue Haying at Kyle Field because of the Hctra workload it was putting on H&M’s athletic department. I Employees responsible for pre- laring the Field and stadium for l&M games have been putting in ti tmuch time getting things back in si ipe after the high school games. ■ 'This is A&M’s facility, not the Hgh school’s,” he said. “We’re a self- Hpporting organization and we Have things to do with our funds and oir people, and we don’t need to be supporting a high school team.” ■ Groff said the f ans at high school Hames would often leave trash Hroughout the stadium, especially Hie bathrooms. T his would leave the Hean-up work and repair costs —for Hems like damaged plumbing —to ll&M’s Athletic Department. And although A&M Consolidated las paying for its maintenance ex- Benses— labor, clean-up and light- |trg — the extra work for the Athletic epartment employees and the ex- Itia repair costs made the situation Jndesirable, Groff said. Groff would not disclose the [mount of money A&M ConsoN lllated paid the Athletic Department Hor Kyle Field maintenance or the ■xact amount of the extra repair lasts, but he estimated that the de partment would spend “a hundred lollars here and there” for various fepairs. The A&M Consolidated Tigers Originally were to play at Kyle Field for the 1982 season only, but be- fause of turf, lighting, seating and jarking problems with their home Field, Tiger Stadium, they continued |o play at A&M. However, the Tigers soon may [lave a new home. If College Station voters pass a |24.5 million bond issue on Feb. 20, (he Tigers will get a stadium of their pwn. The bond issue would put $1.5 Jnillion toward building an 8,000 Seat football stadium adjacent to the nigh school on land the school dis trict already owns. The stadium would include an all-weather track and would house soccer games. Mary Galloway, elections coordi nator for the College Station School District, said if the proposition passes, the stadium should be com pleted in time for the 1989 football season. She said many College Station res idents are eager to have the Tigers play in a stadium other than the massive Kyle Field. “A lot of people felt that it was hard to create an atmosphere of school spirit in an 80,000 seat sta dium,” Galloway said. “There just wasn’t a home-team feeling.” Lloyd Wasserman, A&M Consol idated’s athletic director, said the time has come for the Tigers to have a new home stadium and he is ex cited about the proposition. “Every school needs to have its own facility,” he said. “Something that the kids can identify with — a home turf. Right now we have to travel for practice and for competi tion in almost all sports at the varsity level. This (stadium) is something long overdue for the community.” Groff said that if the bond issue passes, A&M would allow the Tigers to play their 1988-season games at Kyle Field while the new stadium is under construction. Otherwise, he said, Kyle Field will not be the site of any more high school games unless it is a playoff situation or a big game. The stadium construction propo sition will be on a ballot that, if passed, also will allocate bond funds to construct two elementary schools and one junior high school, and to renovate, remodel and convert an existing junior high school into a middle school. The $1.5 million to build the new stadium matches the cost it would take to repair the dilapidated Tiger Stadium, Galloway said. Another $300,000 of the debt would go toward building a 700- space parking area around the sta dium. Another proposition up for elec tion on the 20th calls for $800,000 in bonds to be issued to pay for the construction of a natatorium, a building to house an indoor swim ming pool. If the propositions pass, College Station property owners will be in for a short-term tax increase to pay for the retirement of the debt. The proposed hike would gradually in crease property tax rates over three years. The current property tax rate ap plied toward retiring outstanding bond debt is 24 cents per $100 ap praised property value. The plan calls for an approximate 6-cent increase in 1989, another 6- cent increase in 1990 and an additio nal 5-cent increase in 1991. A classic Members of the Tokyo String Quartet Peter Oundjian, Kikuei Ikeda, Kazuhide Isomura and Sudao Harada perform the Quartet in D mi- Photo by Mike C. Mulvey nor by Mozart at their performance at Rudder Theater Thursday night.See review on page 3. Koop plans screening of students of major U.S. university for AIDS LONDON (AP) — U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said Thurs day he wanted to screen every stu dent of a major American university this spring to help determine the in cidence of AIDS among young adults. Koop also proposed similar mass AIDS screening at a few high schools in the United States but said the gov ernment had made no decision on either proposal. He disclosed the plan at a world meeting on AIDS in London and gave details in an interview Thurs day with the Associated Press. The three-day conference, at tended by health ministers from 114 countries and senior public-health officials from 34 others, adopted a declaration backing the World Health Organization’s global strat egy on AIDS control and preven tion. Proclaiming 1988 the “Year of Communication and Cooperation About AIDS,” the 650 summit dele gates said they “can and will” slow the spread of AIDS but offered no major new strategies. Koop’s plan for anonymous screening of students could prove controversial. Civil libertarians have argued that anonymous screening is an invasion of privacy and that screening of a limited population could be the forerunner of manda tory nationwide testing. The surgeon general said health officials had yet to choose a univer sity, but it would likely be one in a large city with a student body of around 25,000. Plans call for the screening to take place some time this spring, Koop said, and it would likely be part of a one-day open-air campus “gala” on AIDS prevention. “The goal would be to test every body in that university in such a way that it’s done out in the open, above board; everyone knows that the blood specimen is not in any way tagged,” Koop said. “That would give you a pretty good idea of the prevalence (of AIDS) in the age group in an urban setting,” he added. The incidence of acquired im mune deficiency syndrome is high est among 20 to 24 year olds, with male homosexuals and drug abusers among those most at risk. AIDS is caused by a virus that damages the body’s immune system, leaving victims susceptible to infec tions and cancer. It is spread most often through sexual contact, nee dles or syringes shared by drug abusers, infected blood or blood products, and from pregnant women to their offspring. Blood tests can determine the presence of AIDS antibodies, indi cating exposure to the virus, but a positive test does not necessarily mean a person will develop symp toms. Koop said the screening would probably be conducted under the auspices of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta or the American Medical Association. He said anonymity would be guar anteed and those taking part would have no way of knowing the results. Koop said he also hoped that such screening could be carried out at a few high schools in diverse parts of the country. As examples of the types of places he had in mind, Koop cited Philadelphia or New York’s South Bronx in the Northeast and Evansville, Ind., in the Midwest. Polygamist clan, police end standoff following shooting America pays tribute to astronauts CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Space workers preparing for re sumption of shuttle flights paused to pay silent tribute T hursday to the seven astronauts who died two years Bgo in the fiery Challenger disaster. It was one of many remembrances around the country. Tour buses stopped, cafeteria [ines halted and hundreds of engi neers, technicians and other workers poured out of buildings at 11:38 a.m., the moment when Challenger lifted off on Jan. 28, 1986. Flags around the Kennedy Space Center were lowered to half staff, while workers stood silent for 73 sec onds, the length of the fatal Chal lenger flight. The air was chilly, the sky clear, a grim reminder of the frigid conditions that contributed to the space shuttle’s destruction. At the Johnson Space Center in Houston, workers held a quiet, 73- second observance, while officials at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., encouraged work ers to observe the anniversary in their own way. In Concord, N.H., students at Concord High School paused at the beginning of classes to remember Christa McAuliffe, their city’s social sciences teacher who died in the shuttle explosion. She was aboard as NASA’s first citizen-in-space and Stone shows positive signs after third transplant of liver By Mark Gee Staff Writer John Stone, a 1984 graduate of Texas A&M, remains in serious condition in the intensive care unit at Baylor Medical Center in Dallas, hospital spokesman Susan Hall said. Marion Stone, John’s mother, remains optimistic about the suc cess of his third liver transplant. “Johifs had his share of bad luck but he’s doing better,” she said. She added Stone’s doctors are optimistic because he underwent a successful kidney dialysis on Wednesday and was removed from his artificial respirator and most of his post-operation medi cation on Thursday. She also said there were no signs of liver infec- tion or bleeding. Stone, 26, lost his second trans planted liver after 12 days be cause of bleeding. It was replaced by his current liver Jan. 17. The kidney dialysis he under went Wednesday, his first since his third liver transplant, was a significant event because Stone’s liver did not bleed afterward, Marion Stone said. Kidney dialysis is essential after liver transplants because kidney function stops during the trans plant operation. Stone’s second liver bled after dialysis. Dialysis will be required for Stone until his kidneys start functioning. Stone’s first transplanted liver, received Dec. 1 during a nine- hour operation, was lost after 35 days because of infection. The infection cropped up after surgery to stop the liver from bleeding. The surgery was suc cessful but an infection devel oped, said Scott Donahue, chair man for the John Stone Fund in Bryan-College Station. Stone suffers from Alpha-1- Anti Trypsin Deficiency, a rare liver disease that keeps his body from controlling his digestive en zymes, which have destroyed his liver. His original liver was unable to circulate blood properly. A liver transplant will not cor rect the deficiency, but it will give him a new start. The deficiency will be controlled by medication, Marion Stone said. was to have taught lessons from orbit to schools around the country. At McAuliffe’s grave overlooking the New England city, flowers lay atop the black marble marker; deep snow partially obscured the inscrip tion. At Arlington National Cemetary near Washington, June Scobee, widow of Challenger commander Dick Scobee, placed wreaths at the Challenger Memorial Plaque and on Scobee’s grave. With her were a group of children representing schools which have raised thousands for a Challenger Center. She is lead ing an effort to raise $30 million to build the science education center. No Greater Love, a non-profit hu manitarian organization, also placed a wreath at the Challenger plaque. The group runs friendship pro grams for families, especially chil dren, of those who have died serving their country. In Washington, Sen. John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth back in 1962, issued a statement in which he said, “We owe it to the Challenger astronauts to pursue an aggressive space program. Their sacrifice will have meaning only if we learn from it and move forward.” A Buddhist temple in Honolulu planned a memorial service at the gravesite of Ellison Onizuka, one of the Challenger crew members. Tennessee legislators in Nashville read a poem and passed a resolution designating Thursday as Astronaut Remembrance Day. The seven were Dick Scobee, Mike Smith, Ron McNair, Judy Res- nik, Ellison Onizuka, Greg Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe. MARION, Utah (AP) — A quick burst of gunfire Thursday ended a tense, 13-day standoff between a po lygamist clan and police, killing an officer and seriously wounding the group’s ringleader who was sus pected of bombing a Mormon cha pel. The shooting erupted just after dawn as police who had secretly in filtrated the clan’s compound used a trained dog to try to isolate Adam Swapp and his brother from the log house they had left moments before, officials said. In the exchange* of shots, the dog’s police handler was shot in the abdomen and Swapp fell in the snow with bullet wounds in the arm and chest, John T. Nielsen, state public safety director, said. “It’s my understanding that the officer was fired upon first, by whom we don’t know yet,” Nielsen said. He said an FBI agent was shot in the chest, but was unhurt because he was wearing a bulletproof vest. “In the succeeding, following mo ments after the gunfire, the agents moved in an armored personnel car rier to evacuate those who were wounded and they came under ex tremely heavy gunfire from the . . . residence,” he said. However, the shots ended mo ments later and the clan’s four other adults and nine children filed from the house in two groups with their arms raised above their heads. “We are very happy to report in this — : that’s if there’s anything to be happy about in this tragic situation — that all of the children are safe,” Nielsen said. “That was the number one priority of all of the officers.” The siege had begun within hours of the predawn bombing Jan. 16 of the Mormon Church’s chapel a half- mile from the compound. That night, police talked by telephone with Swapp, who said the bombing was revenge against the church and state for the 1979 police slaying of polygamist patriarch John Singer. He told others he sought an armed confrontation to trigger Singer’s res urrection. Nielsen said the decision to seize Swapp, 27, on federal warrants was made after a family friend delivered to police Wednesday afternoon a let ter from Swapp warning he would use any means to defend his com pound. Corps squadron honors 7 victims of Challenger On the second anniversary of the Challenger space shuttle explosion, Taps was played last night for the seven astronauts who died in the di saster. Corps Squadron 7, nicknamed “Challenger 7” in memory of the Challenger crew, held the 11 p.m. ceremony on the Quadrangle. - Senior aerospace major and squadron commanding officer Chris Yancy said the squadron holds the ceremony to honor the lives lost in the explosion at a time when many concentrate on the money involved or who was at fault. “It seems that this year, every body’s more worried about getting money for the families (of the astro nauts) or pointing a finger at Mor ton Thiokol,” he said. Morton Thiokol is the company held largely repsonsible for the me chanical malfunction that caused the explosion. “I think people have lost the hu man aspect of it,” Yancy said. “There were a lot of brave people who lost their lives, and that’s what we’re trying to concentrate on.”