'The Battalion il. 73 No. 62 14 Pages Thursday, December 13, 1979 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 Program collects $106 for Cambodia children The result of the International Students Association’s program on Human Rights Day Monday was a $106 dona tion to the Cambodian Children’s Relief Fund. The ISA had four speakers talk to students about human rights around the world, including a former president of Cambodia, Cheng Heng. The money was collected from donations made by Texas A&M students, faculty and staff. ennedy denies riting Iran letter ' s ’ ^ictiln, :e s, have [ Progranmi -■ped the^ *s they o iir '’Hips saif die: se ihe j|i]*| ■ because I Pushed!,| ent bod ai ' 3ndasj* United Press International 1 w ’ll pailMpEHRAN, Iran — Iranian leaders said 1 togetai^dnesday that Sen. Edward Kennedy offered to meet Ayatollah Ruhollah Eniversittmomeini in an effort to resolve the hostage ‘ wa s ven jrisis. but a Kennedy aide denied the re- arsa ^ port as “totally false. ” the puhliBlhere was disagreement in Tehran, the idearlpw ev er, on whether the reported offer 'ted the;mvismade by letter, telegram or through an irter said Intermediary. Ifhe controversy over the alleged Ken- I Idymove sharpened as the Iranian judge | lo claimed responsibility for the assassi- f] Of nation of the shah’s nephew said the 50 ' merican hostages, now in their 40th day of ■ iptivity, will not be sentenced to death IVen if they are tried as spies. jBut Khomeini himself accused the Un- ed States of fomenting internal unrest in tn in a an effort to divert attention from crimes of America. ” m ' and spra P mesalinei f she were -omplaies n snow nirt her :e of her An official Iran radio broadcast early Wednesday said that in the letter, written by the Massachusetts Democrat Sunday, Kennedy asked to meet Khomeini and praised the ayatollah s accomplishments, saying, “I shall give my blood for your sake.” The radio said Khomeini rejected Ken nedy’s request for a meeting. In Washington, Kennedy aide Richard Burke said the letter was a fabrication. “It’s not so,” Burke said. “The senator has made no communication whatsoever with the ayatollah and that broadcast is tot ally false. ” He said Kennedy “would never say anything like that.” Despite the denial, Iranian leaders in sisted there was such a letter. Sayed Ahmed Khomeini, the Islamic leader’s son, said over Radio Iran: “The original letter is with me. But since Mr. Kennedy has seen this published and it has become bad (for him) this is another matter. ” Two weeks ago, Kennedy accused the deposed shah of looting Iran of billions of dollars and presiding over one of the most tyrannical regimes in history. The state ment was splashed in Iran’s media, which hailed the senator’s remarks. In the holy city of Qom, near Tehran, Sheikh Sadeq Khalkhali, Iran’s most con troversial revolutionary judge and a close friend of Khomeini, said none of the Amer ican hostages will be sentenced to death even if they are convicted as spies. But the judge, who has personally con demned some 200 to 300 followers of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi since the shah was toppled in January, told newsmen his squads would continue to hunt down the shah and his supporters “until we kill them all.” “ three-day protest ended she wrol| been besel he only tli blc. 1 dearest j) lends oflkl Fasting Iranians arrested bell' growing a ind United Press International SAN ANTONIO — Police dragged five anian students screaming “Khomeini, Ihomeini, Khomeini through the City Ball lobby to a waiting paddy wagon JatheonP ec l nes ^ a y> ending their three-day sit-in ;s with -l” ci ty hall steps. Rntl J Angry counter-demonstrators were J ^en.-tflircatcning to kill the students. 3 f going* f° ur police officers, saying they were later the Iranians into “protective cus- ; p>dy,” surrounded the five fasting students Btnoon and told them, “come on, you can’t tay here any more” after about 20 Amer- nven mn( has pres to Texas: >f enginf ans threatened to rush them and tear up heir signs and pictures of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Police said the Iranians were taken into protective custody but charges of blocking a passageway were later filed. They were held under $40 bond each. City Manager Tom Huebner, terming the Iranians “fools” and the counter demonstrators “trash,” said he ordered the arrests because the situation had reached a point that the four officers assigned to pro tect the Iranians could no longer control the situation. The five, some screaming “Imperial ism,” were rushed into a paddy wagon and taken to the Bexar County Jail. Fiji offers island refuge for shah to live in peace United Press International nted b it managfi -ift plant be conf PACIFIC HARBOR, Fiji — The prime | a $4 (W I1 ‘ n ’ s ^ er °f Fiji Wednesday invited the de- ’ollegetf )oset ^ s hah of Iran to take refuge on one of Pearl Id “l natio “’ s islands. tricted! T 16 P oor man has suffered enough and eandSU )ersona lly I think the man, whatever dsevM ■ las committed, has been aban doned by everybody except the United c tates, Prime Minister Ratu Sir Kamisese bra told newsmen Wednesday. Mexico, the shah’s home in exile since IJune, has refused to renew his visa but JEgypt has offered him asylum and reports paid a number of other countries are consid- | er ing a similar offer. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi is re cuperating at Lackland Air Force Base in ISan Antonio. the ui* “It is my personal belief that we should give the shah the opportunity to live in peace on one of our islands. Even Christ promised relief to a thief alongside him on the cross,” said Ratu, prime minister of the South Pacific island nation. “Any decision on this invitation would have to go to the Cabinet, but it is my personal opinion that the shah has been persecuted enough. ” The prime minister was asked where Fiji, which has 106 habitable islands out of the country s 322, gets its oil. “We receive our oil from Australia and I hope Australia will not suffer as a result of this,” he said. “Fiji is a Christian nation and those of us who profess to be Christians should stand up and be counted.” A motley crowd — including members of such diverse groups as the Ku Klux Klan, Bandidos Motorcycle Gang and Brown Be rets — had taunted the Iranians for two days as they read the Koran and prayed on the steps. The crowd cheered as police hauled them away, then grabbed their signs, Khomeini pictures, blankets and jackets, stomped on them and packed them tightly into a nearby trash can. Some members of the group stood in a tight circle and talked of killing the protesters if they returned. ‘“The Iranians were fools for sitting out here in the rain,” Huebner said moments after the arrests, “and, unfortunately, we have enough trash in town to come over here and make a scene about it. ” Huebner said he had made a decision not to assign any more than four policemen to protect the Iranians, protesting the pre sence of deposed Shah Mohhammed Reza Pahlavi, who arrived at Lackland Air Force Base 10 days ago. It took 30 policemen standing shoulder to shoulder two deep around the five pro testers Tuesday night to protect them from an angry crowd of 200 screaming residents waving American flags and shouting anti- Iranian obscenities. City Council Tuesday night upheld Huebner’s decision last week not to grant any parade permits for demonstrations while 50 Americans are being held hostage in Tehran. At the meeting, several speak ers urged the council to “find a way” to halt the sit-in and hunger strike on city hall steps, warning it could lead to violence. There were indications the protective custody arrests may be the method city officials have chosen to defuse the angry confrontation. Asked whether the Iranians would be taken into custody again if they resumed the sit-in, City Attorney Jane Macon said, “We ll just have to wait and see. We ll just have to play it by ear.” 1,950 to graduate this weekend But* About 1,950 graduate and undergradu- a te students are expected to receive de grees in two ceremonies this weekend in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Commencement exercises will be Friday a t 7:10 p.m, for those graduating from the alleges of Architecture, Engineering, Sci- en ce, and Veterinary Medicine. The students graduating from the col leges of Agriculture, Business, Education, Geological Science, and Liberal Arts, and Texas A&M Universtiy at Galveston will receive degrees Saturday at 9 a.m. Speakers at the ceremonies will be Harold J. Haynes, chairman of the board of Standard Oil of California, and Michel T. Halbouty, Texas A&M graduate and pet roleum engineer. Commissioning of officers for the Corps of Cadets will take place Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in G. Rollie White. The commission ing officer will be Rear Admiral Paul C. Gibbons Jr. U.S. Navy Chief of Naval Edu cation and Training. The Houston YMCA Welcome Center, a temporary home for these refugees, operates one of several programs across the nation that attempt to house and resettle members of a mass exodus of over 450,000 refugees from Vietnam, Cambodia (now Kampuchea), and Laos. This man does not speak English, so his name could not be obtained. Battalion photo by Venita McCellon Houston provides for refugees from home Asia By VENITA McCELLON Battalion Reporter HOUSTON — Their first orientation to the United States begins with a layover in a West Coast airport. From there, a flight brings the new Texans to a temporary home, a place of safety. But they don’t see the stereotyped Texas most newcomers see. The Indochinese refugees see only an escape from political harassment and the harsh conditions of refugee camps in other lands. The Houston YMCA Welcome Center operates one of several programs across the nation that attempt to house and resettle members of a mass exodus of over 450,000 refugees from Vietnam, Cambodia, (now Kampuchea) and Laos. The United States, with the help of private programs such as the YMCA’s, has accepted 160,000 of these refugees and expects to admit another 25,000 in coming weeks. The Welcome Center, a small suburban camp of white buildings which is being readied for the winter cold with plastic for the open windows, serves as a second orientation where refugees spend their first 30 days in the United States. One of these refugees, Dao Truong, is waiting, like the others, for a job, a social security number, and housing. Unlike most of the others, Dao, who served as a chief accountant for the U.S. government in Vietnam, speaks English. Dao, who spent the past 11 months in a Malaysian refugee camp, would only say, “They (the Malaysians) were not very friendly to us. “There are so many pitiful stories,” he said. Dao escaped from Vietnam with his six-member family and 278 others on a 63- by-264-foot boat. After three days on the open sea without a place to sit and not enough food or water, they arrived in Malaysia only to be placed in a camp crowded with over 7,000 refugees. The influx of people such as Dao’s family into the United States has caused the Hous ton Welcome Center to go over its capacity level (50-60 refugees) with a population of about 95 refugees, said Fran Flanagan, community resource coordinator for the YMCA Refugee Service. Sixty of these are children under 18, she said. “We have them from everywhere,” Fla nagan said. She said that 48 percent of the people are ethnic Chinese from Vietnam, 27 percent are Vietnamese, 11 percent are Cambodians and the rest are Laotians. “We’ve got a cross section of just all kinds of people, so they’re anything from farmers and fishermen to radio engineers,” she said. The YMCA service, which not only runs the Welcome Center but also resettles re fugees, has a staff of 19, 14 of whom are Indochinese. “It (the service) is a buffer between the refugee camps in Malaysia and Thailand,” said Flanagan. “The idea is to help them become self-sufficient and productive.” The service, which was started by the YMCA in November 1978, has helped more than 600 refugees resettle. All of these are resisters of the Communist gov ernments that have taken over Laos, Cam bodia and Vietnam since 1975. One refugee close to the political prob lems is Cheng Heng, former president of Cambodia, who now works as a community resources consultant for the YMCA. Cheng, who served as president under the anti-communist Lon Nol regime, saw the Communist takeover of his country in 1975 firsthand. “I left 17 days before my country fell to the Communist regime,” Cheng said. He said that with food being used as a political weapon many Cambodians are starving to death. “The people in Cambodia are dying ev ery day,” Cheng said. “About 3 million people will die in the next two months if they don’t get enough food and medicine.” Cheng’s job with the YMCA is to lecture at universities and to civic groups about the need for help in his native country and the (continued on page 6) ter- in 100 years kills more than 120 in coastal area Discarded trees to he given to poor United Press International , BOGOTA, Colombia —- Colombia s deadliest earthquake in more than 100 years devastated the nation’s coastal re- pons, killing more than 120 people and paving hundreds injured and thousands homeless. The powerful quake, also felt across the wrder in Ecuador, rolled through the Paci- nc Coast jungle before dawn Wednesday and triggered a surge of water that des- poyed 70 percent of the fishing village of El Vharco. Civil Defense officials said the quake kil- onn* ^ eas * 121 people, injured more than and left thousands homeless in villages al ong the coast. At least 100 others were jpPorted missing in the country’s second toner quake in three weeks. “It seemed as if it would never end, a Quito, Ecuador, resident said. “It was a long earthquake.” . , . The Andean Geophysical Institute m Bogota said the quake registered 7.7 to 8.0 on the open-ended Richter scale. A level of 8.0 would classify it as a “great” earthquake capable of tremendous damage. Rescue efforts were hampered by block ed roads and scarce airport facilities in the quake zone. The Pan American Highway was blocked when a landslide closed a tun nel between the cities of Pasto and P °A?eT Charco, 310 miles southwest of Bogota, 75 bodies were recovered from the wreckage of flimsy houses of sticks, straw and aluminum sheeting. ,„ El Charco (the name means the puddle in Spanish) received a second blow when a tidal surge churned up by the quake sent a nearby river rushing out of its banks, washing away homes and burying victims beneath a mountain of mud. Only 30 per cent of the town was left standing. Thirty deaths were reported at the Paci fic Coast port of Tumaco near the Ecuador an border where survivors fled the city af ter a tidal wave alert was issued, but it never came. Other deaths were recorded in a half- dozen villages and settlements in the sparsely populated jungle area of Narino State. The Rev. Jose Goberna, assistant direc tor of the Andean Geophysical Institute, said the casualty figure was the highest since a temblor leveled the Colombian town of Cucuta on the Venezuelan border in 1875, killing an estimated 2,500 people. The epicenter of Wednesday’s quake was 125 miles offshore, just north of the Ecuadorean border, the institute said. There was panic in cities and towns of northern Ecuador but casualties and major damage were reported only on the Col ombian side of the border. It was the second killer earthquake to hit Colombia in less than three weeks. A temb lor killed 50 people and left thousands homeless in the mountainous western cof fee-growing region Nov. 23. President Julio Cesar Turbay issued a nationwide radio appeal for additional con tributions of supplies and services to the National Emergency Committee, formed last month to provide relief to victims. By RICHARD OLIVER Battalion Staff While some people are partying and celebrating the coming of Christmas, some Aggies are pausing to remember the true meaning of the holiday — giving. Off-Campus Aggies is collecting Christ mas trees from fellow students going home for the holidays to give to families who cannot afford trees. “I think it’s a fantastic idea,” said Carlo Corso, community relations chairman for the club. “We re collecting the trees from apartments and dorms to give out to some of the needy families.” The organization is asking anyone who wants to donate trees to deliver them from noon until 4 p.m. Sunday to the parking lot of Culpepper Plaza, under the Plaza sign. “Most students usually throw their trees in the trash when they leave for the holi days,” Corso said. “This way we ll be help ing some families who can’t have trees.” Corso added some people may want to deliver the trees to the families personally. Any students who want to do so should call 696-0024 for information. Corso, an engineering technology major at Texas A&M, said he and his fiancee, Vicki Deck, also an engineering technology major, got the idea last year. “Vicki called the Bryan Eagle and asked for some names, and they gave her some,” he said, “so she used those and it was really great. We gave a tree to a lady last year, and it was beautiful because she said her chil dren had never had a tree before.” Corso said he thought perhaps the idea would be better on a larger scale, so he introduced it to Off-Campus Aggies, and the members decided it would be a good project. “It might make Christmas a whole lot better for everyone,” he said. “I know it’ll make mine a lot better. Maybe it’ll take some of the commercialization out of Christmas.