The Battauon Vol. 72 No. 4 16 Pages Wednesday, Septembers, 1978 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Home Sweet Home? Some students are find ing A&M a home away from home. Check it out on page 8. Sadat wants reason in talks I continue a "rence, Kai| it photo | 'hei ?e Wwines be play by m'ng today e closed. United Press International ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE, Md. — Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, arriv ing for crucial Middle East peace talks, said Tuesday the time for “worn out ideas” is over and “reason” must prevail in his discussions this week with President Car ter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. “Together,” said Sadat, “we shall over come.” Arriving in an Egyptair Boeing 707 at Andrews Air Force Base approximately two hours before Begin, Sadat, dressed in a dark suit, was welcomed by Vice Presi dent Walter Mondale and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Security was heavy, but crowds of flag- waving wellwishers ringed the fence near the tarmac as Sadat’s jet touched down. After briefly acknowledging the crowd, Sadat explained how he views the role of the United States in the upcoming summit at the Camp David presidential retreat. “All along,” he said, “we have held the view that this nation is the most qualified to be a full partner in the peace process. Your heritage is unique and so is your global responsibility. “We come here at a crucial crossroads. The challenge is tremendous, but we have no choice except to accept the challenge. We cannot afford to fail the hopes of na tion’s all over the world. “No one,” he continued, “has the right to block the road to peace. This is no time for maneuver and worn out ideas.” Carter, in a solemn mood, settled into Camp David more than 24 hours before his high-level guests. p 'l I4U •- ' * «9i Enjoying some old-fashioned recreation, Mark Willis takes deadly aim before pitching a horseshoe. Willis, a summer journalism graduate from Texas A&M University, was pitching horseshoes outside a drinking estab lishment near the Texas A&M campus. Southern >l( er said Wa difficulty I Horned Fr ner at (be I :U’s teanfa any juniori o prepare l illy knowing ii about TCl| ■ we see» ting report,! lationortk flaying.” Te.tas redj very Wedil s Adarai bum ■ Red Mfei C Satuik however,! ir Mark Joi i the qtiartfj would s as the bettfj i w ™^"Ro 0 ts, ” the highest rated series in tele vision history, made blacks proud about Bing black, but also increased resentment painst whites, according to a study by _jH*jr a sA&M University sociologists re- tv/T/iW'iod on the eve of the series rebroad- ~ . £ '.*• - I r - . ■«r- \ ■ os*.. Steaks, gift will highlight banquet honoring Teague Leaving the White House Monday, he warned: “Compromises will be mandat ory. Without them, no progress can be ex pected. “My own role will be that of a full part ner, not trying to impose the will of the United States on others but searching for common ground on which agreements can be reached and searching for exchanges of compromise that are mutually advantage ous to all nations involved, ” he said. Aides said the U.S. objective is to break through a number of obstacles at the top political level. If this can be done, then Begin and Sadat would send new instruc tions to lower level negotiators who will carry on the talks in weeks ahead. Under a virtual media blackout, the summit participants hope to hold exhaus tive discussions of the issues. “We just wanted to go where the tele phone doesn’t ring,” said one top U.S. of ficial. The current violence in Lebanon may also be reviewed by the three leaders al though it is not a formal agenda item, offi cials said. Carter summoned ambassadors Samuel Lewis from Israel and Herman Eilts from Egypt to assist. Also on the U.S. delegation are Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, presidential adviser on national security; Secretary of State Cyrus Vance; William Quandt of the Na tional Security Council; special presiden tial Middle East emmissary Alfred Ather ton;-Harold Saunders, assistant secretary of state for Near East Affairs, and White House press secretary Jody Powell. Vice President Walter Mondale will be in charge of the executive branch in Car ter’s absence but probably also will visit the talks. The administration has been generally silent about U.S. proposals that may be put forward to encourage a breakthrough. Speculation has centered on a U.S. sec urity treaty with Israel or stationing of U.S. troops in the Middle East as part of a peace-keeping force. Both would require congressional review and approval. Vi Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper, Jr. Going for a ringer By CANDICE HILL Battalion Reporter Fourteen-ounce New York steaks will grace the banquet honoring Olin E. “Tiger” Teague on Sept. 16 in Duncan Dining Hall. An estimated $10,000 gift also will be presented to Teague. The representative will be retiring this year after more than three decades in Congress. “I expect the gift to cost in the neighborhood of $10,000, probably,” said Steve Pringle, assistant to the president’s office. ^Roots’ may have caused esentment, study shows Domingus] Arciniega jThe rebroadcast is running on network Revision this week. The two sociologists, Bill Stanley and r. William Kuvlesky, spent 15 months terviewing black women in rural Texas fertile series was aired Jan. 23-30, 1977. vein analysis of the impact of the series — dramatization of Alex Haley’s search for his ancestry — showed “Roots’ had a sig nificant impact. “Roots gave the black people in our study something to feel proud about,” said Stanley, a black graduate student who was principal investigator for the project. “It created a link between the black cultures of then and now. He said the negative impact of the series was mostly a temporary reaction. “Tempers were running fairly high about that time,” he said. The Texas A&M researchers selected Shelby County in rural East Texas for the study, segregating black families as a group without regard to social or economic status, the researcher said. Three out of four respondents in the study experienced increased feelings of ra cial pride, and slightly more than half said “Roots’ caused them more negative feel ings about whites, Stanley said. Kuvlesky pointed out that the study co vered only a small sampling, raising the question of how blacks in other parts of the South and across the country reacted to the series. But Pringle is not revealing what it is. He said that Teague might read The Bat talion and would find out what gift is planned. Tickets for the banquet are being sold for $25 each. The money will pay for the meals and for Teague’s gift. Extra money will be put into a Texas A&M scholarship in Teague’s name. About 600 tickets have been sold so far, but Pringle estimated that 1,200 people will attend the dinner. The dinner for Olin Teague has been cancelled, a spokes man for President Miller’s of fice reported early today. Astronaut Joe Allen has been added to the program of speakers at the banquet. He will discuss Teague’s interest in space and science. Allen is associate adminis trator for the congressional liaison at NASA. He also recently joined the space shuttle team. Three other areas of Teague’s interest will be discussed at the banquet. U.S. House of Representatives Majority Leader Jim Wright will discfiss Teague’s 32-year congresssional career. Former veterans af fairs official, Oliver Meadows, will discuss Teague’s military interests. Teague’s interests in education, especially his con tributions to Texas A&M will be discussed also. Leon Jaworski will be the master of cermonies. Letters of appreciation are being sent to Box OET and they will be presented to Teague at the banquet. President Carter, former President Gerald Ford and former first lady Ladybird Johnson are expected to send letters. About 200 letters have been received. More arrests likely in strike United Press International MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Opposition leaders charged Tuesday that President Anastasio Somoza’s forces already have ar rested almost 700 opponents in a nation wide crackdown against a general strike, but the government threatened more ar rests. The opposition Conservative Party said 75 political and business opposition lead ers and 600 civilians were arrested throughout Nicaragua on suspicion of aid ing the 12-day strike aimed at ousting Somoza, whose family has ruled the Cent ral American nation of 2.4 million people for 41 years. “They are trying to reduce the strength of the strike, ” by arresting opponents, said Eduardo Chamorro, political secretary of the Conservative party and a member of Congress. The strike started in the provinces Aug. 25 following the successful Sandinista commando operation at the National Palace. Business leaders say the strike is 80 percent effective throughout the nation and that some businessmen are prepared to continue it for three months. The National Guard announced Sunday it had arrested 200 “agitators,” and Presi dential Press Secretary Rafael Cano said Monday persons advocating the govern ment’s overthrow “are liable to be ar rested, are being arrested and will con tinue to be arrested. ” Congressman Chamorro said those ar rested Monday included Adolfo Calero, the Notre Dame-educated Coca-Cola manager in Managua; Pedro Quintanilla, a lawyer and member of a splinter group within Somoza’s Liberal Party; Hernaldo Zuniga, a lawyer from the city of Masaya and leader of the anti-Somoza Broad Op position Front. Also arrested were Santiago Rivas, a Conservative leader in Matagalpa; Noel Rivas, vice president of the Chamber of Commerce; Oscar Tiran, a Conservative Party leader from Leon. When asked how long the strike would last, Manuel Jose Torres, president of the National Development Institute, one of the key groups behind the strike said, “We know of a lot of businessmen who have taken measures for three months.” Government radio stations Monday night stepped up appeals to workers, who are being paid during the work stoppage, to return to work. “Workers, don’t lend yourself to the political game. Go to work. Don’t support this political strike,” one announcer said. The manager of Managua’s biggest shopping center, Oreste Romero Rojas, said 78 percent of 200 establishments in the center were closed Monday. More than 150 poor people lined up at the government’s National Institute of Foreign and Domestic'Trade in downtown Managua to buy beans, rice and corn. One old woman said food prices at her local market had increased 50 percent in the last two weeks. “We are going hungry, no one can afford the prices,” she said. 4 Ice carving cold business Ninety percent work and ten percent ta lent is the way J. W. Maynard describes ice carving. Some people would disagree. Maynard, who has been at Texas A&M University for five years as the assistant director of food service auxiliaries, learned the art of ice carving 17 years ago at a chef s seminar in Houston. Since then, Manmard has done more than 30 ice carvings a year. Each carving takes nearly two hours to complete. Maynard, who does the ice carvings in the Memorial Student Center basement, uses a five-prong ice pick and a wood carv ing instrument to shape the 300-pound blocks of ice. The ice carvings made by Maynard are used at buffet dinners held at Texas A&M. The carvings can be used several times and are stored in the MSC basement freezer at 10 degrees below zero. Maynard taught classes in gourmet cooking and quality cooking at Texas A&M, but he is not teaching any classes this semester. Maynard attended Wayland Baptist College, did post-graduate work at Cornell University, and recieved his mas ter’s degree from Southwestern Theologi cal Seminary.