TiPBatlali^rl In Quest of Cotton A&M, Texas to battle for SWC crown See related stories, pages 12,15 ng 00. Join us ing dinner lited salad ier service arts at 3:00 'sday only, Vol. 82 No. 63 USPS 075360 16 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 27,1985 ubarak defends Egypt’s commando raid MasterCard, ican Express lege Station Associated Press JCAIRO, Egypt — President Hosni Rib.uak's government launched a vigorous campaign Tuesday to de- ■id its commando raid on a hi- jMked Egyptair jet in which 58 peo- |)|v died, desj)ite little public criticism here. ■Mubarak accused Libya of spon- ■'mg the gunmen who seized the plane and told reporters lie sent the soldiers to Malta to storm the jetliner only after the pilot reported: ghey’re going to kill us all." Bonner gets Iready for trip abroad Associated Press ■MOSCOW — Yelena Bonner, wife of dissident Andrei Sakharov, returned to Moscow Tuesday to pre- ||jre to go abroad for medical treat- iment after 19 months of internal jexjle with her husband in the closed [Citf of Gorky. ftm iet" friends' of the couple wete ■ milted to visit Bonner’s apart ment. But they declined to discuss the details of their meeting with the |2[year-old physician, saying she plild speak for herself if she wanted Hneet with the Western press, ■funner suffers from eye and heart problems. After Sakharov went on at least, three hunger strikes, Soliet authorities said they would permit her to seek medical treat- (nentiti Italy and the United States. ■Vord that she would lie allowed to tpend three months abroad came Wore the summit in Geneva last jveck between Soviet leader Mikhail ■rbachev and President Reagan. It was seen as a gesture on human fights, which has become an impor tant point of contention between the superpowers. t: In two rarely permitted telephone tails, one last month and the other last week, Bonner told relatives in lihl United States she planned to be Jin Italy for treatment of her eyes on LUei 2, then would go to the United HStstes for heart surgery. She said she had agreed not to :aik to foreign journalists as a condi- ioh for permission to leave. HTwo Soviet friends who visited the hi apartment said Bonner traveled leje by train Tuesday on her first rip to the capital since April 1984. ■This is believed to be the first time S(j\ iet authorities have permitted someone under internal exile to leave the country with the intention bljieturning. ■fonner’s daughter Tatiana and lation and Tatiana’s husband, Efrem Yankele- id. This offer is |vi|h, live in Newton, Mass. Yankele- itiJli said Tuesday: “Of course, I’m a|y pleased to know she is in Mos cow. It means the Soviets are going olseep their promise. (It) means she. arrived on schedule’.’ Mubarak blamed the deaths on the hijackers, who he said were the first ever to detonate phosphorus grenades during a hijacking. “Not a single Egyptian bullet killed any body” among the passengers and crew, the president said. The fire grenades set the interior of the Boeing 737 ablaze. In Malta, government spokesman Paul Mifsud said the death toll in the hijacking and commando raid was 59. He said one passenger was shot to death by the hijackers and the other 58 people died during the commando operation. Hijackers took over Flight MS648 Saturday evening on a flight from Athens, Greece, to Cairo and forced it to land on the Mediterranean is land of Malta. They let 11 women go and shot three American passengers and two Israelis, killing one of the Americans, and threw them from the plane. Maltese authorities said that 27 survivors of the commando raid were hospitalized, including the man alleged to have led the hijack team. The pilot, Hani Galal, returned to Cairo. They had said earlier that the to tal death toll was 60. But Mifsud said Tuesday it had been lowered to 59 because a Canadian baby was counted twice in the earlier total. The only public criticism of the raid in Egypt came from two opposi tion politicians, who demanded par liamentary inquiries into how the deaths occurred. A senior army officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that he and colleagues with whom he had spoken were “shocked at the num ber of people killed.” But such comment was atypical. An Egyptian diplomat said the com mando raid had made Mubarak “more stable politically than he was last week” because it improved his standing with the militarv, which he said is the key to political stability in Egypt. The official Middle East News Agency said telegrams of congratu lation were sent to Mubarak by lead ers of all provinces,, members of his ruling National Democratic Party, Egyptian ambassadors abroad and political and labor leaders of all per suasions. State-owned newspapers called the attack “necessary,” “courageous” and a lesson in “how to deter terror ism and terrorists.” Mubarak said the hijackers had closed off negotiations, not even al lowing nine children off the plane, when the pilot radioed the control tower to “please do something. They’re going to kill us all ... You have to storm the plane or we will all die.” e a i you mily a i with ys. or the conve ne Dental Dropriate i family amilies with linski, DOS a, DDS )DS DDS DS Zip Wash Photo by JON P. KARP Seniors Dan Smith (right), an electrical engineering major from Rich ardson, and Ronald Lee, a senior industrial engineering major from Houston, cleanse their mud-caked bodies in Rudder Fountain after a drag in the mud during Elephant Walk Tuesday afternoon. Smith is Class of ’86 social secretary while Lee is distribution chairman. For more pachyderm pictures, see page 9. Waite, Bush meet to discuss Lebanese hostage situation Associated Press WASHINGTON — Anglican church envoy Terry Waite, who has been negotiating for the release of kidnapped Americans in Lebanon, met with Vice President George Bush Tuesday and said he came to “keep in touch” with the U.S. gov ernment. Waite, who came to the White House at Bush’s invitation, said he was making “no special request” of the administration as part of his ef fort to gain the release of the hos tages and said the United States has taken the “correct” position in the affair. Waite also said he believed that there “is a way through the prob lem.” Bush praised the envoy for his courage in the endeavor and thanked him for his work. “We’re very grateful for his humanitarian concern,” Bush said. The envoy’s visit came after he traveled to New York to speak with relatives of the hostages. Asked what the United States should be doing to help gain the cap tives’ release, Waite said, “I think the United States has taken ... a correct position at the moment, they have remained calm, they have remained patient and they have made it possi ble for an independent negotiator such as myself to pursue an opportu nity to see some way through this problem.” Asked whether he had any sug- f estions or proposals for the United tales, he said he had come “to keep in touch ... to get further clarifica tion on various questions, and then I shall be returning to Beirut.” Waite said he would meet with “one or two” other people in Wash ington before leaving. Earlier, in New York, Waite said he wants to speak with Kuwaiti officials regard ing prisoners whose release the kid nappers demand. Waite has made two trips to Leb anon in an effort to free the Ameri cans. Four of the hostages wrote a letter to the Rev. Robert Runcie, the archbishop of Canterbury, seeking Waite’s intervention on their behalf. Waite, a lay assistant to Runcie, has successfully negotiated the re lease of Britons held in Iran and Li bya. The hostages who signed the let ter to Runcie were the Rev. Law rence Jenco, 50, of Joliet, Ill., a Ro man Cathoic priest; Terry Anderson, 38, of Lorain, Ohio, chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press; David Jacobsen, 54, of Huntington Beach, Calif. Aggie bonfire 50,000 expected for tonighfs annual blaze By TAMARA BELL Staff Writer To most Aggies the word “bonfi re” means more than just burning logs. It means a desire to beat the University of Texas Longhorns. But this year, bonfire also symbol izes a burning desire to go to the Cotton Bowl for the first time since 1968. An estimated 50,000 people will be on Duncan field as the yell lead ers, drum majors and redpots set fire to the stack at around 8 p.m., says Hudson White, the senior in charge of bonfire. “The Corps has been working on bonfire since Oct. 5,” he says. “Once push started Nov. 17, each outfit was assigned a six-hour block. Now it’s near completion and it’s been a blast building it. Nothing can hold a can dle to it.” Although the cadets and other A&M students actually cut and stack the logs, White says once the flame sparks, bonfire is controlled by a mysterious power. “There’s a spell that falls over the bonfire and the people crowded around it,” he says. “It involves the work of many gods. Through the mist and fog that hover above the stack, mysterious powers are con trolling the fate of the A&M-t.u. football game.” While mysterious powers are con trolling bonfire, four Corps outfits will be controlling the spectators. White says people can’t use Dun can field as a parking lot. Shuttle buses will run continuously from Ol sen Field to the bonfire site from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. A perimeter 100 feet from the stack will be roped off and guarded, White says. He says this is necessary not only because of safety regula tions but also because people try to light their cigarettes or cigars from the bonfire flame. This measure also protects overzealous Aggies from falling logs, he says. Because Duncan field is Univer sity property, no alcohol will be al lowed at the site, he says. And once the gasoline is thrown on the stack, smoking won’t be allowed either. Bonfire wasn’t always as orga nized and restricted as it is today, White says. The first bonfire in 1909 was built after A&M beat UT. “I guess the Aggies back then had this wild hair after the game to build a fire — surely no alcohol was in volved — and they proceeded to tear down picket fences and anything else burnable to create a bonfire,” Hudson says. “This is only a theory, but it makes for a good story.” Alan Cannon, assistant sports in formation director, says Head Coach Jackie Sherrill will speak at about 8:30 p.m. Yell practice will follow Sherrill’s speech, he says. lebanese Aggies maintaincultural unity T THE HARGROVE It: 779-1933, 776-43M|t«* HIS COUPON COUPON D WITH ANY OTHER OlS FREE EXAMINATION Of GULAR PATIENTS OF TNf By FRANK SMITH Staff Writer Despite the continuing troubles in heir war-torn homeland, Lebanese tudents at Texas A&M have main- iijped a strong sense of unity. ■Most of all, the common bond is hat we are Lebanese,” says Nadim ares, public rekitions officer for V&M’s Lebanese Student Associa- ““"r.TT-’'''on “We were born in the same jolntry. |We speak the same language, are the same culture, know and ave been to the same places and oftie have attended the same chnols,” he says. F ires, a junior computer science tjor from Beirut, has been in the ’ni;ed States since 1981. He last vis ed Lebanon in the summer of 981. “Really, (the country’s condition was) basically the same as it is right now,” he says. “There has been some improvement, but things always seem to go back to the same point. “Believe it or not, there has been some light of progress. The groups are finally talking to each other. Bei rut is getting to be a safer place to be. But there are always black sheep. And they seem to be the stumbling block right now.” Walid Khalil, president of the LSA, says tensions overseas have not adversely affected relationships among Lebanese students here. “I think being far from the fight ing and in a relaxed, friendly atmo sphere like here at Texas A&M Uni versity makes people forget their differences,” Khalil says. “Besides, there are no reasons for us to be fighting even if we have differing ideologies.” In fact, on Nov. 17 in the Memo rial Student Center ballroom, the LSA conducted what has become an annual dinner celebrating Lebanese Independence Day. Last Friday marked the 42nd anniversary of Lebanon becoming an independent state. “This dinner is a very important event for us because it is one of the things that gathers us all together to work as a team,” Khalil says. Khalil says the students invited their professors and friends at A&M and around the state, other Leb anese living in Texas and Memorial Student Center officials for the din ner. “This year the purpose of our din ner was not only to celebrate our in dependence day but also to express our gratitude to the professors who have taught us at this University,” he says. He says more than 200 people at tended this year’s dinner. The asso ciation currently has about 25 mem bers. Khalil, a senior industrial engi neering major from Beirut, says he doesn’t think Lebanon’s civil war really stems from any major differ ences among the Lebanese people. “There just are so many people from outside Lebanon in the coun try right now,” he says. “I think the Lebanese can settle their own prob lems if left to themselves.” LSA member Sana Hamade shares a similar outlook. “No Lebanese really had any se rious conflicts with each other,” she says. “I think the cause of our prob lem was external. “Then they (outside factions) ex ploited our differences in religions and cultures and made it an internal problem,” she adds. Hamade, a graduate student in environmental engineering who earned a civil engineering degree from A&M last December, has lived in the United States for Five years. She says her parents have lived here for the last two years. Her last visit to Lebanon was a one-month stay in the summer of 1983. “When I was there it was pretty calm, although fighting had been going on before I got there,” she says. “Then, a few days before I left, the war in the mountains started be tween the Druze and the Christians.” She says the fighting forced the closing of the airport and delayed See Aggies, page 11 15 wounded by bomb in Greece Associated Press ATHENS, (ireece — A car bomb detonated by remote con trol exploded Tuesday as a police bus was passing, ripping away one side of the bus and wounding 15 of the 22 officers inside, offi cials reported. Two police officers in a car about 600 feet behind the bus saw the explosion and one said, “It was a miracle no one was killed.” “We ran to the bus and pulled out our injured colleagues. Some of them were badly hurt,” he said. Officials said later that only three of the officers were se riously wounded. The explosion occurred at 9:45 p.m. — about two hours after some 1,000 anarchists gathered in front of Parliament demand ing the release of 16 people ar rested during riots in Athens last week. They also were protesting the death of a teen-ager shot by a policeman during the rioting.