Vol. 71 No. 148 10 Pages Battalion Tuesday, May 2, 1978 News Dept. 845-2611 College Station, Texas Business Dept. 845-2611 Inside Tuesday • Dogs have hang-ups too. p. 3 • Three generations of women Aggies p. 5 • KAMU-FM — the final sign-off? p. 2 arter begins talks with Israeli leader United Press International ASHINGTON—Israeli Prime Minis- Menachem Begin, expressing hope negotiations can progress toward in the Mideast, arrived Monday for tings with President Carter and other S. officials. arrived at Andrews Air Force and was welcomed by Secretary of Gyms Vance, who reaffirmed the dean commitment to Israeli security. _,Ve do hope the peace process will con- |e so that we can achieve real peace in ) the Middle East,” Begin said. In brief air port statements, both Begin and Vance re ferred to the official reason for Be gin’s visit to the United States—the 30th anniversary of the independence of the state of Israel. . “This is a momentous occasion for all free men of good will,” said Begin, who arrived from New York aboard an Israeli Air Force Boeing 707 with an Israeli flag flying from the left side of the cockpit. Vance said the American commitment to the security of Israel “is a commitment on which Isreal can depend.” Among other top U.S. officials welcom ing Begin were Middle East mediator Alfred Atherton Jr.; Assistant Secretary of State Harold Saunders, and U.S. ambas sador to Israel Samuel Lewis. Begin and Vance then drove to the State Department without answering questions from reporters at the airport. Begin ar ranged to meet President Carter at the White House at 1:30 p.m. EDT and then attend a White House reception for the 30th anniversary celebration. angerous cargoes could e diverted around cities By BETH CALHOUN roposed ordinance to divert trucks car- |g hazardous materials around Bryan jCollege Station was discussed Monday Bryan City Council study committee. e proposed hazardous cargo routes : tie east bypass (Highway 6), the west lass (FM 2818) and two sections of hway 21 that lie outside the bypasses, hey also include sections of Turkey [( s Creek, Finfeather, Palasota and Groes- beck streets. A major provision in the ordinance would require trucks to obtain a permit before traveling on roads not included in the cargo route. Bryan Fire Chief Don VanHuss said the permit would enable him to know where carriers of hazardous materials are going to and coming from. VanHuss said a permit would establish a specific route for each >ollege courses for igh school discussed c By MICHELLE BURROWES durational programs for elementary high school student were discussed by A&M Consolidated School Board Cur- ilum committee Monday night. )ne program, the High School Enrich- nt Program, is co-sponsored by area schools and Texas A&M University, standing high school students take versify courses for high school elective fits. his year, 10 Consolidated students are icipating in the program. To qualify, a lent must have an overall average of 90 hove, or a SAT score of 1200 or higher. )r. B.L. Shapiro, director of the Uni- sity honors program, told board mem- that HSEP serves as a bridge be en high school and college. Many stu- its have trouble adjusting to college, he 1, and the HSEP could help alleviate oe of these problems, fhapiro said the most popular courses in the mathematics department. The ond most popular courses are the sci- :es. The board passed a motion supporting EP that instructs counselors to search qualified students and notify students 1 parents by mail. The curriculum committee also pre ted a proposal to bring a “clustered ap- )ach to the Middle School’s Gifted & lented Program. The cluster approach >uld separate exceptional students from :ir regular calsses for one to three class riods per day. For example, students excelling in math mid be allowed to take high school ;ebra in place of eighth-grade math. On the elementary level, clustering )uld occur within individual classrooms, mr to seven accelerated students would selected in each classroom. ear gas drives Jtay residents rom dormitory Some 200 residents of Utay Hall were reed to evacuate their rooms last night hen a tear gas cannister was released on e first floor of the dormitory. Ben Tharp, head resident, said that at iproximately 12:30 a.m. a cloud of tear is filled the dormitory sending residents -eing outside. One student jumped from ie second floor and was treated and re- ased from the University health center r a heel injury. Another student was leafed for eye irritation. University Police Sgt. John McDonald lid that a class B misdemeanor charge ill be filed in the case — punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both. But cDonald said it will be up to University ministrators what will be done about the cident. McDonald said he has no suspects pres- ntly in the case. However, he said he Ians to trace a lot number on the tear gas annister. He said that tear gas is not a controlled substance” and can be bought t even local hardware stores. David Carson, president of Utay, said ames of three witnesses have been given 3 University police. Carson said residents f the dorm want to press charges, j There will be a military and campus olice investigation,” Carson said. McDonald said that there have been I jimilar incidents at the dorm in the past ew weeks, but that this is the most seri- |)US. The board requested impact statements from the administration outlining conse quences that might arise if the school utilizes the cluster program. Bruce Robeck, board president, also announced that the eighth A&M Consoli dated Mexico Study-trip will depart June 29. Twenty-three students will spend 18 days in Mexico City and Pachuca, and will receive one quarter’s credit for the classes they will attend there. Areas of study in clude music, dancing, cooking, art, history and languages. The students have been busy raising the money needed to finance the trip. They have held an aluminum can collection, a swimming meet and a bridge tournament to raise funds. The approximate cost per student is $499. The board passed a motion to employ two landscape architects to develop pre-. liminary plans for landscaping at A&M Consolidated High School. Trustee Lambert Wilkes opposed the motion and said other architects should have been given a chance to submit bids for the work. carrier that would enable the fire chief to watch for possible hazards. Several businessmen, while agreeing on proposed routes and the need for regula tion, want to exempt carriers delivering in Bryan from the permit system. They said they are concerned with the possibility of not being able to reach their carriers and inform them of “safe” routes. There is also controversy over defi nitions in the proposed ordinance. Defi nitions of words used on truck warning signs, such as flammable and dangerous, are not provided in the ordinance. Charles Mundy of the Penwalt Corp. said he would like to see the ordinance rewritten to include the Department of Transportation’s definition of hazardous. “What’s the good of trying to control one or two (hazardous materials) if you can’t control all of them?” Mundy stud. Businessmen and councilmen also dis agreed on the classification of hazardous and non-hazardous materials. Under the proposed ordinance, hazard ous cargo is “any substance carrying a De partment of Transportation Class A or B poison, corrosive liquid, oxidizing or flammable solid, liquid anhydrous am monia or radioactive label or designation.” Non-hazardous cargoes would be any flammable gases and liquids, or any pressurized gases not falling under the hazardous definition. Trucks carrying these materials would not need permits to travel in Bryan. However, the proposed ordinance says these trucks must use the most direct routes, must not pass within 600 feet of a school, hospital or nursing home and must not park in residential areas. Councilman Henry Seale said the coun cil should use the transportation depart ment’s definitions concerning warning signs on trucks. He also said the council must work on an acceptible format for the permits. Selling solar savings object of ‘Sun By LINDA SULLIVAN Bi-annually Americans advance and set back clocks in accordance with Daylight Savings Time; even so, Congress has issued yet another time jumble for Wednesday, May 3. Wednesday has been nationally proclaimed Sun Day to enlighten the public on the capacities of solar energy. Texas A&M University rep resentatives are initiating several events to increase solar energy awarness in the Bryan-College Sta tion area. Dr. Guy Franceschini, a profes sor in the meteorology department, said local efforts to promote Sun Day have been rather Toose- jointed” due to approaching final exams on the University campus. Even so, a solar energy open house will be held all day Wednes day in the mall of the Zachry Engi neering Center. The open house will consist of about 20 commercial displays set up by assorted manufac turers and distributors of solar .energy systems. In addition to exhibits, a poster contest will be held. Entries from local junior and senior high schools will be judged according to the rep resentation of the Sun Day theme. A sunrise breakfast at 5:30 a.m. in Hensel Park will begin the Sun Day festivities. At 7:30 p.m., a slide presentation of the applications of solar energy will be shown in the Texas A&M Architecture Au ditorium. Both the breakfast and the slide show are co-sponsored by the Brazos Valley Sierra Club the Texas A&M chapter of the American Soci ety of Landscape Architects. Both are open to the public. Franceschini highlighted a recent 6-month solar radiation study at Texas A&M to point out the prox imity of solar energy. With his re sults he concluded that adequate amounts of solar energy in Bryan- College Station could support most of the area’s hot water needs. Franceschini attributes the lack of available solar energy equipment to inadequte marketing. “People aren’t using it enough because the commercial world isn’t selling it,” he said. Franceschini said his basic studies prove the need for a specific obser vance of solar energy within all communities to increase the public awareness . While this first celebra tion of Sun Day might be over looked by many, Franceschini said he expects greater participation next year. “By then commerce will get into the act,” he said, “and Sun Day will inevitably blossom.“ J Two charged as spies for Hanoi begin trial United Press International ALEXANDRIA, Va.—An American and a Vietnamese, charged with spying for the Hanoi government, faced trial Monday in a case made controversial by the use of wiretap evidence. Ronald Louis Humphrey, a former U.S. Information Agency officer, and David Truong, a young Vietamese expatriate, could receive maximum sentences of life in prison if convicted on the most serious of seven counts against them. The trial in America’s only postwar spy case involving the Communist govern ment of Vietnam comes on the third an niversary of the end of direct U.S. military involvement in the war in Southeast Asia. Humphrey is accused of stealing secret State Department cables and passing them to Truong, who allegedly gave them to couriers to deliver to Vietnamese officals in Paris. It was after more than eight months of surveillance on Humphrey and Truong that the two were indicted Jan. 31 and ar rested amid widespread publicity. Later, after hearing testimony from At torney General Griffin Bell that he “was trying to protect the nation,” U.S. District Judge Albert V. Bryan Jr. approved the admissibility of evidence gathered from warrantless wiretaps and searches. Since that ruling, the Senate has passed a bill to prohibit electronic surveillance in the United States without a court order. A group of former anti-war protesters, calling themselves the Vietnam Trial Sup port Committee, said Sunday there are “political motivations” behind the Justice Department’s case against Humphrey and Truong. “We believe this case gravely disrupts efforts toward postwar reconciliations be tween the United States and Vietnam and attempts to justify the continuing refusal of the United States to grant reconstruction aid,” the group said in a statement. They also charged the administration is using the case “as a vehicle to claim the inherent presidential right, without court approval” to order wiretaps, television surveillance or mail opening in the name of national security. The American Civil Liberties Union also has filed suit against Bell, FBI Direc tor Clarence Kelley and two other FBI of ficials for violating the constitutional rights of four persons whose telephone conversa tions were overheard as a result of the wiretap on Truong’s phone. Truong, 32, is the son of a former Vietnamese peace candidate who was jailed after losing an election to former President Nguyen Van Thieu in the late 1960s. Humphrey’s wife and children are Vietnamese, and he was working to free a son from Vietnam while the alleged es pionage occurred. In a revised indictment, the two were charged with one count of conspiring “to injure the national defense” and with one count of espionage, each carrying a maximum life sentence; with one count of conspiracy, with two counts of stealing government documents, with failing to register as agents of a foreign government and with delivering government docu ments to an unauthorized person. Spy for Soviets in prisoner exchange ‘Sooey Ducks!’ Battalion photo by Pat O’Malley Gary Lamb, who is a student trainer for the Aggie Basketball team, leads his version of the Arkansas yell, “Sooey Pigs.” Lamb, who has named himself “King Duck,” is seen here leading the yell, called “Sooey Ducks” to those Aggies present at the Ar kansas baseball game. All the Aggies present enjoyed performing the yell, to the dislike of Ar kansas fans. The yell must have helped, since the Aggie baseball team won the conference cham pionship for the second consecutive year. United Press International BERLIN—Robert G. Thompson, con victed by a U.S. court 13 years ago of spy ing for the Soviet Union, was taken to U.S. mission headquarters Monday to be traded for an American held in an East German prison in part of a three-nation prisoner exchange. Thompson, accompanied by East Ger man lawyer Wolfgang Vogel and Shabtai Kalmanowitz, aide to a wealthy Israeli member of parliament who inititated the deal, flew from New York overnight to Frankfurt, where they changed to a plane bound for West Berlin. At West Berlin’s Tegel Airport, the three men slipped through the terminal to two waiting U.S. State Department cars that whisked away at high speed just as a reporter spotted them. The cars took them to the headquarters of the U.S. mission in the suburb of jZehlendorf. A mission spokesman said they would wait there for the East Germans to deliver Windom, Minn., college student Alan van Norman, jailed last summer for trying to smuggle an East German family out of the country. Thompson, who walked to freedom from Lewisburg, Pa., federal penitentiary Sunday and flew on a commerical airliner to West Germany, said he would do it all over again. Tf I had to do it again, I would not change one day,” the heavy-set, bearded Thompson, 42, said on release. “You see how the sun shines? That’s how I feel.” Thompson, who was serving a 30-year sentence for passing secrets to Moscow, thanked all the people involved in the prisoner swap and said: “Now I want to go home and be at peace with the world.” Thompson—who says he was born in Leipzig, East Germany and was a major in Soviet intelligence—said he considered himself retired and was anxious to go home and to have his “first beer in 13 years and perhaps see my first woman.” Last week, East German advisers per suaded Mozambique to free an Israeli civi lian pilot, Miron Marcus, who had been imprisoned for 18 months in the African nation. State Department officials and Jewish leaders have expressed hope the swap in volving Thompson will be a prelude for trades involving Lawrence Lunt, a CIA employee imprisoned in Cuba, and Jewish dissident Anatoly Shcharansky jailed 13 months in Russia.