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I ■onie costl'l :d Edna* ts best gat Battauon Friday, December 14, 1979 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 Arson suspected in five campus fires By CAROL HANCOCK Battalion Reporter Texas A&M University police have reason to suspect arson in the fifth small fire in eight months in the Soil & Crops Scien ces Building, which was quickly exting uished Wednesday evening. The College Station Fire Department responded to a call shortly after 6:30 p.m. when a student who smelled smoke re ported it to an employee. The fire was in a small storage room and did not cause much damage, police reports show. University Police Chief Russ McDonald said the storage room contained only boxed jars of honey and other minor items. It appears to have been started by a cigarette lighter as there was no evidence of in flammable liquids or matches, he said. The room was locked and accessible only with a key, McDonald said. The first of the five fires was June 28 in the same storage room. College Station Fire Chief Douglas Landua estimated it probably started with a cigarette, police reports show. Damage was minimal. The second fire was on July 12 in rooms 322 and 322B. After a custodial worker dis covered the fire, the University Police De partment was notified and the fire depart ment responded. The fire caused quite a bit of damage to the building and some laboratory equip ment was lost, McDonald said. Arson was suspected but no result came from the in vestigation, he said. The third fire on Nov. 30 was in a testing laboratory. Cause of the fire was deter mined to be sacks of dry grass lit by a cigarette lighter, McDonald said. Damage was minimal. A fourth fire on Dec. 5 in a northwest basement stairwell was traced to fiberglass heating and air conditioning filters. Other than smoke damage, there was hardly any damage, the report shows. Since there w-as nothing in the stairwell that could have ignited the filters, arson is suspected, McDonald said. McDonald said there have been investi gations going on since the first fire and new evidence has been turning up with each fire. All fires have occurred around the same time of the evening and were lit in similar fashion, he said. McDonald said the police department has narrowed the suspects to a few people whom the department knows were in the building during every- fire. There doesn’t appear to be any motive, McDonald said, but it doesn’t look like someone is trying to burn down the building. “If that’s their motive, they’re not doing a very good job,” he said. Three OPEC countries raise prices $6 per barrel Need a light? just hope!' id. >rt Isabel, ;ned Walla rterfinals. 19-: Gerald Hallasse, a 70-year-old rancher from Bee- ville, relaxes and lights a pipe while working in his shop. Hallasse is well known for his skill and crafts manship in making Hackamore bits, which are used in training horses. Battalion photo by George Evans I tests plus fear of failure — anxiety United Press International ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Three leading Arab oil producers, includ ing America’s biggest supplier, announced Thursday they will increase their oil prices by $6 a barrel, a move that could streng then the moderates position at critical price-bargaining talks next week. The three nations are the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the largest exporter of oil to the United States. Announcing the increase, Oil Minister Maria Said Otiba of the UAE said it was applicable to all forms of crude exported by the three countries. Oteiba made the announcement minutes before boarding a plane to Paris on his way to Caracas, Venezuela, for next Monday’s ministerial meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to discuss higher oil prices, said the UAE’s news agency, WAM. Oteiba is president of OPEC. The $6 increase represents price hikes of 27.8 percent, 28 percent and 33.3 percent respectively for the Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, industry sources said. It means that UAE oil will sell for $27.56 per barrel, Qatari oil for $27.42 and Saudi oil for $24. Industry sources said that by introducing the $6 increase, the three Arab countries — known to be OPEC doves — have nar rowed the gap with the cartel’s hawks. “The OPEC moderates can now go to Caracas and face the hawks with a much stronger position,” industry sources said. Saudi Arabia and Qatar had no immedi ate comment on Oteiba’s statement. Although Saudi Arabia has kept its price low, its officials have complained recently that Western oil companies did not pass the lower prices onto consumers but instead rolled up huge profit figures. Oteiba did not say when the new prices — which would mean prices above OPEC’s $23.50-a-barrel price ceiling — would go into effect. But in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corp., excerpts of which were released by the Emirate’s news agen cy Wednesday; Oteiba said Kuwait and possibly Venezuela might follow suit. Oteiba was in Qatar Wednesday and has recently visited Saudi Arabia for oil price coordination talks. ens, ions' _ nis after pk 1 M3 tie. ted Lutk tnd Bay it Hebert. ies lashvtfl Exams produce illness in students By ROSEMARIE ROSE Battalion Reporter Just when finals are becoming the most mportant thing in many peoples’ minds, ome students find themselves growing ill it the mere mention of a test. This adverse reaction to taking tests, or ust studying for them, is called test anxiety lionshipS® md affects people in varying degrees de ending on the person and the importance , if the test, said Dr. Nick Dobrovolsky of he Personal Counseling Service at Texas University. Test anxiety comes from a student asso rting past negative experiences with tests and anticipating similar negative results, be said. Some students also associate test ing with fear of failure, and because they don’t know what will be on a test, are apprehensive of the unknown. Anxiety manifests itself in many different ways, Dobrovolsky said. In extreme cases a person may become physically ill — vomit, have headaches, perspire profusely and ex perience shakes and stomach problems; some people can actually bring on illness in order to avoid a test situation. The degree of anxiety a person experi ences will vary with the importance of the outcome of the test with respect to the student’s goals. “The more important a test is to the ful filling of a goal, the more able it is to elicit an anxiety response,” he said. To help students overcome test anxiety, both the Academic Counseling Center and the Personal Counseling Service offer workshops to reduce the stress of academic testing. The workshops teach students techni ques for dealing with their anxiety and study habits to help prepare for upcoming exams. Students are also advised to read books on studying, of which one of the best, says Dobrovolsky, is “Toward Success in College” by Texas A&M University’s Rod O’Connor and Tom Taylor. The study habits recommended by coun selors include establishing a practical and flexible study schedule, studying material before it is to be covered in class and taking notes in class that highlight what the lectur er says rather than recording information the student shciuld already know. Another idea counselors use to help stu dents is called “test wiseness.” Dobrovols ky explains the concept as making the stu dents aware of the dual purpose of tests. “Tests are used both as an evaluation tool and a learning instrument,” he said. “Final examinations are mostly evaluative; weekly tests are used to determine progress and how well the student is learning and the teacher is teaching.” When a student is “test wise” he has a reasonable expectation of what a test really is, he said. In Iran ... Khomeini to let visitors view hostages’ condition United Press International TEHRAN, Iran — Ayatollah Ruhol- lah Khomeini Thursday gave permis sion for neutral observers to visit the 50 U.S. hostages and ordered immedi ate establishment of an international commission to condemn “American crimes.” Khomeini said the observers will disprove charges the hostages are constantly being threatened with ex ecution and kept in “inhuman” condi tions. “It is essential that you form as soon as possible an international commis sion in consultation with the (Islamic) Revolutionary Council to study the aggressive policy of America in Iran, ” Khomeini told Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh. Militant captors, who are holding the hostages for the 41st day, immedi ately responded: “We are prepared to take Ayatollah Khomeini’s orders. It is up to the foreign ministry to make arrangements for this international meeting. Observers can come and see the hostages as the imam has ordered.” The captors previously had rebuffed similar efforts by the foreign minister, refusing to take any directives except from Khomeini personally. Diplomatic sources said the urgen cy of Khomeini’s order to counter “American propaganda” indicated that U.S. efforts to turn Iran into an inter national outcast were being felt in Tehran. The government also announced what it said was progress in negotia tions to end the turmoil in northwest Iran. Nevertheless, an estimated 100,000 persons marched in Tabriz chanting, “We are neither East or West, we are the sons of Ayatollah Shariat-Madari!” — spiritual leader of the region and Khomeini’s major opponent. The entire city was shut down for the demonstration. Shariat-Madari held talks with Khomeini Wednesday night and the government Thursday announced some progress had been made in set tling the issue. roups on campus, across country help refugees IS 16 By RICHARD OLIVER Battalion Staff Imagine a tragedy that wipes out half a country’s population, [and leaves the remaining survivors scattered all over the world [to try and start a new life in alien surroundings. This scene could be a real one, if predictions concerning the [Cambodian refugees come to pass. Since 1976, the refugees, fleeing a war-torn country and a J communist-dictatorship rule, have settled in the countries of ■ Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, and others to try and start anew. I More than a third of the fleeing Cambodians have already I died from the effects of war, repression and disease. As many as 2 I million more are on the verge of starvation. J One obvious problem has ensued — the people are not wel- I come in all areas, and food and shelter must be found. 1 Fortunately, there are some organizations that have come to ]| the aid of these people. At Texas A&M University, the International Students Asso ciation has already sponsored a program which collected $106 for the refugees. Reiyadh Chakmakchi, president of the organi zation, said the program was an overall success. “We had four speakers on Monday (International Human Rights Day) to speak on human rights,” he said. “We set up a booth in the VISC3, and had various programs and forums | throughout the day. It was a success in that we collected the $106 in just a few hours, and most of the donations consisted of loose p change:” Chakmakchi said the tragedy could potentially be much worse than most people realize. “The former president of Cambodia, Cheng Heng, spoke here this week, and he said by the time this situation is cleared up, half the Cambodian population could be dead,” he said. “The size of the whole tragedy is immense. People are still dying every day in Cambodia and the five borders (surrounding the country). If half the population died, that would be a loss of 4 or 5 million people.” One of the main suppliers of food and medical help in the world is located in Westport, Connecticut. The Save The Chil dren Foundation is sponsoring a Cambodian Relief Program to try' and save the refugees. Laura Malis, coordinator of public information for the organi zation, said 1979 is the International Year of the Child, and Save The Children is trying to help on an international scale. “We re sending emergency food shipments mainly through our agency in Great Britain,” she said from the organization’s office in Connecticut. “The Cambodian problem is such a tragic and alarming situation. Time magazine has termed the situation as the ‘Auschwitz of Asia,’ and 1 think that’s true. People are actually in the last stages of starvation, and are dying daily. It’s simply overwhelming. ” Malis said Save The Children does not use volunteers, but is professional, and therefore funds present the greatest problem. “Over 200,000 pounds of food has been sent to the refugees,” she said. “As we raise more money, more aid is sent. The need is limitless. We re looking for money. Every little contribution helps.” Chakmakchi said the Vietnam government has slowed the relief effort by not allowing any land transportation for food provided by the United Nations. Malis added help is sent through sea and air, and there are currently six organization medical teams working in border camps which house approximately 90,000 refugees. Malis also said the media have provided good coverage, but other world situations tend to overshadow the seriousness of the Cambodian plight. “It’s a real problem,” she said. “The news media is not fickle. The Iran situation is serious, but it has sort of forced the Cambo dian situation on the back burner. It’s so important for people to realize the tragedy which is occurring. It’s not front page, but the people are still hungry. “Rosalyn Carter has done a fantastic job. She’s telling people about the problem and getting things done. Just this morning, she was on the Today show telling it. It’s important we don’t forget, even though we’re not bombarded about it (Cambodia) daily. ” Malis said in order for the Cambodian refugees to survive another six months, over 165,000 tons of rice must be provided. Without this help, she said, 2V2 million people could starve over this period. “We feel the colleges have a great potential in fund-raising,” Malis said. “College students are concerned and aware of inter national problems. Any personal contributions are helpful. ” Malis listed several programs that colleges can use to help in raising funds. “The Link Of Life is a program sort of like a chain letter, ” she said. “An organization can start a letter off to someone asking for a one dollar contribution, and ask the contributor to send the letter along to someone else. “At some colleges, whole dorms have given up a lunch, and asked the cafeteria to send the money that would have been used for the meal to the Cambodian Relief Program.” Malis added the organization has also asked people to give up a habit and send the equivalent money that would have been used to a charity. “People have given up smoking or drinking, and given the proceeds to us for the relief program,’ she said. “That adds up to a lot when it’s all finished.” Chakmakchi said international students at Texas A&M are especially concerned with the Cambodian situation, and want to help in any way possible. “International students have been presented on the negative side since the crisis in Iran,” he said. “We understand Amer ican’s feeling so bad about the hostages. “In some way we re trying to show our interest in human rights. We feel as negative about the whole Iran thing as you do. We want everyone to understand that. Malis said any contributions can be sent to Save The Chil dren, Cambodian Relief Fund, Dept. P, Westport, CT 06880. or call toll-free 1-800-243-5075. “Any little bit helps, she said. “One dollar may not seem like much, but they add up to thousands."