al contains a pk al preference; iwedinthel; of evidence s with Bol i’s alleged )n the same fi : ohi ities of a wm to be questia the judge dtiJ is relevant to The Battalion Vol. 73 No. 33 12 Pages Wednesday, October 17, 1979 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 ANM returning to air fter eliminating static ie doctor said spleen and a position w| o be ii pleen, ;>ws." By MIKE BURRICHTER Battalion Reporter er II months off the air, KANM radio ack and ready to rock n’ roll. ANM, a student-run stereo radio sta in which can be heard only on a cable at I.9 FM, has been off the air since De- lember. But this week it should be back, nks to the telephone company and some llunteer students who solved an electrical blem that prevented it from opening Her. ■—Af Todd Gross, KAN M’s assistant manager, )R THRU said as soon as a few minor adjustments on 'Be cable system are made, the station will leglin broadcasting. ■ Actually, the station could begin broad- Mting now, ” Gross said, “but we want to get as strong a signal as possible so we can yiompete with other radio stations around Gross said that earlier attempts to re- M I m Policewomen: More than tokens open the station fell through because of cable problems — static interference on telephone lines used to send the signal. The station sends broadcasts to Midwest Video cable company via telephone wires, which in turn sends out the signal on cable. “That has pretty well been taken care of,” he said. “Now all we have to do is make a couple more adjustments to make the signal louder.” Gross said he is aware that earlier pub licized attempts to reopen the station has produced some skeptics. He went into the station facility, located at B-l lounge between Moore and Crocker halls at Texas A&M University, and put on a record. Then he walked into another room and turned on a stereo, and placed the tuning dial on 99.9 FM. There was a signal. “When we get some adjustments made, we are going to be putting out an excellent signal,” he said. Gross said a strong signal is imperative because KANM is so close in frequency to Houston’s FM 100. “We expect to be on the air by this Thursday,” he said, “and we should be in full swing by next week.” KANM moved from broadcast facilities at Briarwood apartment complex on High way 30 in December. The station had been there almost a year, Gross said. Gross said KANM was originally spon sored and funded by student government, but now the station is self-supporting. He said the station receives promotional rec ords from several record companies and makes some money through advertise ments. “We have also received a $400 grant from Exxon,” Gross said. The Exxon grant came from a former KANM disc jockey, he said. The only expenses are equipment, and Gross said the station saves money by hav ing students build and repair equipment themselves. He said the station will broadcast 24 hours a day, seven days a week. About 90 volunteers have signed to work as disc joc keys, news reporters and in advertisement sales, Gross said. All work for KANM is done by volun teers, except for ad salesmen, who make a 15 percent commission. Gross said the music format will be rock, progressive country and jazz. “We play what you can t hear around here, ”he said. “It’s basically just a bunch of student disc jockeys having fun playing what they want to play,” he said. “You won’t hear much, if any, disco. I’ve burned some disco albums. ” Sir ith University law enforcement REG. PRICi: By DEBBIE NELSON Battalion Reporter jVith women now making up 18 percent he University Police Department, the e certainly has more than a token ale. ne sergeant, one investigator, and six ers of the 44 department members are Jnen, said Capt. Elmer Snyder. I he University Police Department has oyed women officers since 1971, when as the first department in the county to a woman, Snyder said. ipven now, he added, no other county department has more than one female offi cer. Vickie Thomas, with the department for 18 months, started as a uniformed police officer and is now an investigator. She said she does run into problems because she is a woman. She said when she had to answer a call at men’s dorm as a uniformed policewomen, she was “hassled.” “Now, when I walk up to them in plainclothes, no trouble. They don’t have time,” she said. She said students are sur prised to find out she is a police officer. Police Chief Russ McDonald said two women work on every shift, and one is always uniformed and on duty. McDonald said that, logically, women officers are sent to handle calls from women’s dormitories, See related story, page 3. if possible. But they are also sent to men’s dorms. McDonald said all the women officers have attended a school on rape prevention. With this information, policewomen have conducted rape prevention seminars in the dormitories. Thomas said she likes her work on the force. “It took me a while to get used to it, ” she said. It bothered her that students acted like she had no authority. Once she got used to that attitude, Thomas said, it stop ped bothering her. Thomas joined the force while working on a sociology degree. “I was tired of schobl — ready to get into law enforcement without a degree,’’she said. She still attends school part time, and needs 30 hours to finish her degree. Battalion photo by Ken Herrera Bella Abzug, former co-chair of the National Advisory Committee for Women, speaks Tuesday evening at Rudder Theater as a guest speaker for Texas A&M University’s MSC Political Forum. Abzug, in her speech on the women’s movement, urged students to “take hold of their world.” Abzug: equal rights are 6 simple justice 9 ACNi ow of force to counter Soviet troops ^•Marines begin maneuvers in Cuba YOU! CHOU United Press International UANTANAMO BAY, Cuba — Tues- s landings of more than 2,000 Marines uantanamo Bay are part of a U. S. show Force to counter Cuban and Soviet mili- presence in the hemisphere, he Marines, who were to hit the Carib- an beaches from ships and helicopters at were ferried to the island by an am phibious force from the USS Nassau, USS %mouth Rock and USS Spartanburg unty. iLance Cpl. Kevin Merritt, 19, of ’hoenix, Ariz., said Tuesday night the Cu- lans have increased patrols around the base, but there was no atmosphere of ten- ion as some 2,200 Marines prepared for the exercise. “It’s not a John Wayne-style landing with shooting all the way,” said one Navy spokesman. “We re describing it simply as a helicopter-borne and water-borne land ing.” Marines were to fly by helicopter from the USS Nassau to landing strips on oppo site sides of the base, while amphibious landing craft were unloading troops and five M-60 tanks at Windmill Beach in the center. “This is a training exercise which rein forces existing Marine defenses. It in no way approximates a landing in hostile con ditions,” said Col. Warren Copenhaver, one of the operation commanders. Tuesday, however, base commander John Fetterman declared a “Condition 2” state of readiness, requiring all those not involved in the exercise to take cover. The cost of the operation was not known; estimates ran about $500,000 above normal costs. The purpose of the exercise is to rein force the 5,000 personnel of this 45- square-mile naval base that has been held by the United States since 1898. It is the only American military base on communist territory anywhere in the world. The landings are the first major rein forcement exercise here since 1974, al though about 170 Marines made a visit in 1976 to familiarize themselves with defen sive positions along the fence. The broader purpose of the amphibious maneuver is to demonstrate American re solve to defend its friends in the Western Hemisphere from any effort by Cuba or the Soviet Union to ferment revolution or dis patch military forces to regional trouble spots. The Marine exercise actually began Sunday with the arrival at Guantanamo of an attack squadron. They will play a supporting role in four weeks of games involving the Marine land ing battalion of about 1,200 troops and some 1,000 support and service personnel. The Marines arrived aboard the new amphibious assault ship USS Nassau, which looks like a small aircraft carrier and is capable of launching helicopters from its flight deck and small landing craft from its stern “well.” —Four-train crash seriously injures 12 nnvi «' ** D0V! AR SOi United Press International PHILADELPHIA — A commuter train ing 30 miles per hour smashed into the ear of another commuter train stopped at H |he station during rush hour Tuesday, shing it into a third and fourth train and injuring hundreds of commuters. (There were no fatalities reported, but at st 12 people were reported in serious Indition and at least one was admitted to rgery. |The hospitals reported that most of the tier injuries were minor — cuts, bruises Id broken teeth — and the nearly 250 injured were released after treatment. Gene Robbins, Conrail Eastern Region general manager, quoted the engineer of the back train as saying signals “gave me the go-ahead.” The engineer went forward and when he rounded a bend the sun was in his eyes and the emergency signal came on. Robbins said the engineer managed to shout “hit the deck” just before the crash. An estimated 1,200 commuters were on the four trains. R. B. Hoffman, assistant general man ager of Conrail, said it was not known what caused the crash and said it may take sev eral weeks to find out. “It could have been signal failure. It could have been mechanical failure. It could have been human failure,” he said. Five of the estimated 35 cars involved were knocked off the track, but none over turned. By CAROL AUSTIN Battalion Reporter The women’s movement is not any one organization; rather, it has become mil lions of American women who have exam ined the human condition and decided that woman’s place is every place, Bella Abzug told a crowd of about 200 Tuesday evening. Abzug was at Texas A&M as a guest speaker of Political Forum. Abzug was “released” as co-chairman of the National Advisory Committee for Women in January 1979. “I was not released, I was fired,” Abzug said. “But in that sense, I feel terrifically released.” Abzug was given the choice of resigning or being fired after the committee released statements to the press outlining criticism of President Carter’s budget cuts. Time magazine reported “the release, which contained such undiplomatic words such as ‘unacceptable’ and ‘challenged,’ reached White House Aids Hamilton Jor dan and Jody Powell as they were celebrat ing Jerry Rafshoon’s 45th birthday. Out raged, the White House staffers decided Bella had to go.” “The truth is, the major areas of infla tion are in the areas of housing, hospital care, food, etc.,” she said. “The budget cuts in job training, education . . . cut the heart out of a lot of people, but it didn’t make that much difference in inflation.” Abzug is currently organizing WO MEN, USA, which “will establish a vehi cle for women’s economic rights and equality for women. A strong supporter and co-sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment, Abzug as serts that the ERA seeks to eliminate laws which discriminate against either sex. Women are seeking to share equally the power and privileges locked into tra ditionally male-dominated roles, she said. They are seeking respect for the contribu tions they make daily, whether in the home or outside. Perceptions of work done by women is perceived to be less valuable than work performed by men. “With the majority of the population in numbers being women, why are there only 16 women in the House and only one woman in the Senate?” Abzug said. “Equal rights for women are a matter of simple justice. We do everything in pairs except govern. That seems pretty un natural to me, she said. WOMEN, USA is trying to help women mobilize, to make them a political force for change, Abzug said. “It is a divorced woman fighting for So cial Security benefits in her own right, a working woman demanding the same pay and promotion opportunities as a man, a widow embarking on a new career, a mother organizing a day care center, a bat tered wife seeking help, a minority woman on Welfare seeking job training so she can break the cycle of poverty for herself and her children,” Abzug said. “It’s a woman running for public office. It’s every kind of woman.” Women must fight for their rights be cause people who have power don’t give it up easily and people with prejudices don’t relinquish them easily, Abzug said. There has to be action from the people, from the grass roots up, she said. Being active includes being concerned with everyday events that affect our fu ture; when people don t care, or don t be lieve that their votes and voices don’t have any effect, we have the Nixons of the world, Abzug said. Abzug said she urges students to take hold of their world. “Wherever you function, this country is messed up and we need to take it on,” she said. A&M prof: Stiffer rules (needed to stop oilspills United Press International AUSTIN — A Texas A&M University troleum engineering professor told a ouse committee Tuesday stiffer regu lations are needed to prevent oil blowouts :e the one in the Bay of Campeche that rated Texas beaches with oil. Bruce Dameron said excessive gas and d in the well bore probably caused the |ne 3 blowout of Ixtoc I. “Those are indications you are moving :o an abnormal pressure zone,” Dameron d the House Environmental Affairs •Committee. Dameron said federal regulations stipu late that all personnel working on an oil •'ell on federal waters be licensed in the Bpping of oil wells. He said the U.S. Geological Survey has week-long schools which all personnel must complete before being licensed. He said the certification must be renewed once a year. If trip tanks were made mandatory on offshore oil well sites, he said, more oilspills could be prevented. Dameron said the trip tank measures the mud that is placed into the well bore and also detects the flow of fluid intrusion into the well for mation. “The trip tank can be used to monitor the mud and flow of fluid and give the operafor an indication if anything is going wrong, ” he said. Dameron said Pemex, the Mexican na tional oil company drilling the Ixtoc I oil well, did not have the monitoring devices and also does not have a school to train personnel in the capping of oil wells. United Way reaches 51 percent of its goal 5AY OLD CHAPS, , FlG+fT poverty^ WITH l ALF Ajjjl 5WORD? The Brazos County United Way has reached 51 percent of its goal in the annual fund-raising campaign. A total of $112,652.38 has been pledged or collected. “We are quite pleased with the results so far,” said spokeswoman Ann Wiatt. “Last year at this time, the Bryan drive was at less than 40 percent,” and the College Station drive was below that, she said. The $220,420 fund drive is scheduled to end Oct. 31. A chicken-wire container in the shape of a giant thumb is located near Rudder Fountain for student con tributions to United Way. Contain ers are also at the three bus stops and in the Kleberg Center lounge. No specific goal has been set for the student drive, said John Scheider, student drive chairman. About $18,000 has been collected from Texas A&M University faculty and staff. The goal is $75,000. Dr. Don Hellriegel, professor and head of the Management Department, is chairman of this year’s drive. De partment heads are in charge of col lecting from their faculty. The United Way supports 18 agencies in Brazos County, includ ing boys’ and girls’ clubs, the local chapter of the American Red Cross and the Brazos Valley Museum of Natural Science.