tThe Battalion Serving the Texas A&M University community ling teaiE ■ tit takes fe ouse. Hel/ol 74 No. 176 Thursday, July 16, 1981 USPS 045 360 s gone. Alla Pages College Station, Texas Phone 845-2611 sure of tk manycasaM " n- . . . , ,„■■,■■■ , , , , , mi- lakes itimpfe The Weather Today Tomorrow High 95 High 94 Low 75 Low 75 Chance of rain. 20% Chance of rain. . . . . . . 20% carry on a i win. He ing instead 'eringthe centives to i “powerlm ind the «n ay that tk Israel hit by more ‘ftair strikes •evenueln® United Press International iBEL AVIV, Israel — Palestinian ta winnin£|uerrillas retaliated against an Israeli air t personlc jtriki by pounding northern Israel with jphy of w 159 Soviet-made rockets in the heaviest venifmy ihellling against the Jewish state since a it. Somev'fJje 1973 Middle East War. Three civi- icrsonhas'iahs were killed and 27 injured, atisfied woBhe guerrilla artillery and rocket har- and the* age Wednesday hit a 30-mile arc of . Hcli towns and settlements, Israel’s ofwinniteiiilitary command said today. It said e coache Jiree people were killed and 27 injured. ot by anyPalestinian gunners rained 169 ffering i iaiet-made 122mm Katyusha rockets or by prtfl 50 artillery shells on Israeli towns caching st^md settlements south of the Lebanese ‘j Btier, the military command said, tryingtonaB’he state-run television called it the ?s a winnnHst shelling since the 1973 Middle e the dif 'iast War. fair and jusBVorst hit were the coastal Mediter- Ban resort town of Nahariya and the 3 Blominantly immigrant town of ■ v B'nt Shmona, 30 miles inland, the nilitary command said. M Hlii Nahariya, tv.'o motorists and a Bor driver were killed. In Kiryat ihmona, a rocket smashed into an ^Btment building, injuring 10 people, he television reported. It was not im- " Pu!® iatel y known where the other 4 ’j i ’■pie were injured. ; by EasierKatyusha crashed into my home,” i elected loB one Kiryat Shmona woman as her • SchmidtItBhter was treated for injuries at the ;e Parker )cal first aid station. “We didn’t know d, Joel ,ow to get out. The girl was in the chil- s followec rens room. Everything caved in. treal’s Gar here was smoke. I finally took her and innings id jn the bathroom.” lOiner. Dave ?■ i e 8 in > w h () accepted a presidential for theAI..' omi| oitio n to form a new coalition gov- 1in overt!: rn P len h said, Israel will continue :he seventli.r a yk*ng the Palestinians so that people t by CoutBFyat Shmona won’t leave that front pitcher toP 6 ! This is our goal and we will not whopitd °andon it. We are doing everything we Oakland' an ! so there won’t be any Katyushas. " touchedforii#kc Palestinian rocket attack came ings, wastli^f a heavy Israeli air strike Tuesday Hich Gos» a b ls t guerrilla bases south of Beirut in I the davfB^ a Syrian MiG-21 was shot down, hough, alijl^dicial sources said a tiny guerrilla hits in jjffyter group headed by Ahmed Jibril Bthe heaviest hit by the air raid and 2 empty B believed to have unleashed the une, \vhiof.H et attack in reprisal, d time for if® ” " IRA refuses ~ued Cross prison visit United Press International BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Bri- ain invited the International Red Cross ^inspect Maze Prison today and talk , vith hunger strikers, but the IRA im- TWf nediately objected to a visit unless it '»/ breed British concessions. Britain's Northern Ireland Office wMW innounced Wednesday night it was w W accepting a long-pending Red Cross 4k j |>fFer to send a team from Geneva today Il° “aspect the facilities. U Jf d Prisoners in the Maze, including ^ /7L:ight IRA convicts on hunger strike, vere informed of the visit Wednesday light — just hours after the funeral for j he sixth Irish Republican Army hunger 1 itriker to die in an effort to attain politic- il prisoner status. .*0 While Martin Hurson’s funeral took ClllbC ilace in the village of Galbally, one per- item ion was injured in an IRA bomb explo- .« lion at the Wellington Park Hotel in ine ielfast. In Londonderry, where about alioa 1,000 people turned out to mourn, a /outh was struck in the leg by a plastic 45-2611 Hillet during skirmishes with police. Northern Ireland Secretary Hum- ihrcy Atkins, who described the Maze Jpthe most humanitarian prison in the ■■BB^vorld, agreed to the inspection after he protesters said last week the changes should apply to all Maze in- L nates, not just IRA members. T,“The government deeply regrets the unger strikes are continuing and has aturally been considering further what Steps it can properly take to persuade hose concerned to end their action,” .Atkins said. Atkins urged the Red Cross to pub- ish its normally confidential findings, f But Jerry Adams, vice president of he IRA’s political voice, Sinn Fein, said he visit showed “the British govern- « i.ihent is once again trying to abuse an JSK6P “temational organization for its own •Jens.” DpiCy PlTf the Red Cross puts pressure on * JJiVgjhi British government to concede to vJUu'Jhese just demands, Sinn Fein would welcome their intervention,” he said. [Otherwise we see no useful purpose Jeing served by their visit.” | Mediation efforts earlier this month 3y a Catholic group from Dublin, the lish Commission for Justice and Peace, T" iroke down with its members accusing Britain of backing away from promised .-hinges. w ri iimi Library association speaks for employees Some ideas like notepads help workers By KATHY O’CONNELL Battalion Staff Members of the Texas A&M Li brary Staff Association have found a way to lessen expenses in the Sterl ing C. Evans Library. Acting Chairman Carol Jones said association members came up with the idea to use sheets of scratch pap er to make them into note pads. Jones said she collects the paper from the various sections of the lib rary, then she takes it to the printing center in the library basement. There, Kayvan Jahedkar, a student worker, cuts, glues and packages the paper into scratch pads. The project has been in operation about a week, she said, and response from the library staff has been good. Jones said the main reason the pro ject was initiated was that “it seemed an awful waste to use the pretty pads when the paper is going to be thrown away. I think a lot of people feel they same way I do. ’ Jones stressed that the scratch pad project is in-house. “I wouldn’t want to give the impression that we re taking orders, but we aren’t the only ones on campus who have this kind of project. I think some of the departments do the same thing. In addition to this project, Jones said the association also arranges so cial functions for the library staff, such as the annual Christmas party. She said they also “act as a sound ing board for staff members in the library.” For instance, when stu dents were parking their bikes on the library concourse, the associa tion brought the problem to the lib rary administration. She said they contacted the Uni versity Police and asked if there was some way to ticket the bikes and let Staff photo by Greg Gammon The Texas A&M Library Staff Association has come up with a way to association works within the library. Other functions include social turn old paper into notepads. The house project is one of the ways the functions for the staff, such as the annual Christmas party. students know that the concourse is also responsible for posting the signs for pedestrians and handicapped that prohibited bikes on the con- people. She said the association was course. All library employees, including The library has approximately 40 student workers, are allowed to join faculty, or professional librarians and the association, Jones said. 120 classified employees. Strip-mined land may not need special care Strip mine owners may be spending thousands of unnecessary dollars in the process of reclaiming some depleted mine sites, says a Texas A&M Universi ty landscape architect. Dr. Harlow Landphair, associate professor of landscape architecture, said under the right conditions many strip mined sites will revegetate with a minimum of help from man. Predictions are that a million acres of Texas land will be stripped in the next 40 or 50 years for the lignite coal de posits that lie beneath the surface. Skipping breakfast these days? Don’t. That’s the advice of Dr. Dymple Cooksey, a foods and nutrition specialist on the home economics staff of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, a branch of the Texas A&M System. “Breakfast is important to properly equip us for the day’s activities,” she said. “And when people don’t eat break fast, they’re more likely to resort to skimpy, high-calorie, low-nutrition snacks by mid-morning,” she said. A better idea is to try “Time-Saving Breakfast Breakthroughs,” she said. “Breakfast Breakthroughs” are Cook sey’s answer to the “no-time, no morning appetite” syndrome, she said. “One main thought behind them (the breakthroughs) is that with a little im agination and advance planning, ho- hum breakfasts can turn into extraordi naire,” she said. The main key is to prepare part of your breakfast menu the night before, as in these menu suggestions. — Beat and refrigerate eggs for scrambling the next morning. — Assemble ingredients for pancakes and waffles, measure them and set them aside. — Wash, peel and cut up fresh fruit or melons the night before. Combine these in your blender jar and blende then refrigerate. In the morning you’ll have a cool vitality drink for a very diffe rent breakfast treat. — If you’re getting back to basics with grain, make whole-grain muffins and breads ahead of time. Divide them into meal-size portions and freeze. On the mornings you want these “Breakfast Breakthroughs,” just heat them. — If you’re one of those people who must be coaxed out of bed by the aroma of fresh coffee, then fill your coffee mak- Landphair said the natural revegeta tion process should be considered only for land that is not good for farming like the Claypan region. In the study of old unreclaimed strip mines in this country and in Europe, Landphair discovered that sites receiv ing sufficient rainfall had begun to sup port a substantial amount of vegetation. Unlike sites that are replanted only in grass, the unreclaimed sites showed a natural diversification of plant life, he said. Several varieties of grass including Johnson and Big Blue Stem were among the plants Landphair found along with er with water and grounds, plug it into a timer the night before and your cup of enthusiasm will be ready when you are in the morning. — Chop up cooked meats, fish, poul try or ham the night before and add it to your omelet for breakfast the next morning. trees like cedar elm and live and post oak. There are several problems with landscaping a mine area and replanting it in solid grass, Landphair said, includ ing the expense — about $2,000 to $3,000 an acre for coastal Bermuda grass — and the thwarting of Mother Nature. He has estimated that the natural pro cess of revegetation would cost about $400 to $500 an acre. Public reaction to strip mines re planted in grass is good because of their appearance. If you’re a peanut butter fan, crumble cooked bacon and mix it with peanut butter for a spread on toast the next morning. — Grate up some of your favorite cheese the night before and top English muffins with it — or some other favorite topping. Muffins can be put under the “People like that; it’s pretty,” he said. “To my way of thinking, it’s a false solution. Mother Nature doesn t do it that way. “It would tend to generate a land scape somewhat reminiscent of the land you would see in the Cross Timbers area of the state,” he said. “Scientists will tell you that you can t put it back the way it was. You’re start ing all over from day one from the ecolo gical standpoint. The idea of trying to put it back to original contour is wrong. ” He said the new shape of the land is broiler with the fresh topping and served in minutes. “With these Breakfast Break throughs’ as a start — and depending on how imaginative you are,” she said, “breakfast can be a great time to wake up your taste buds and prepare yourself for a better day every day.” different, “but different isn t necessarily worse.” Landphair already has received fund ing for his research from the University and intends to apply for additional money from the National Science Foundation and the Office of Surface Mining. “They (the government) have come up with the answer (mining laws) before they’ve asked the right question,” he said. “If we could learn how to give Mother Nature a hand, wouldn’t that system be more stable and cost us a lot less in the long run?” Engineers to assemble at University Improved productivity through engineering will be the theme of a national conference expected to bring about 3,000 visitors to Texas A&M University in 1982. The American Society for En gineering Education (ASEE) has announced it will hold its June con ference on the campus of the largest engineering college in the nation. Dr. Robert H. Page, Texas A&M dean of engineering, said the session is designed to bring industry, gov ernment and education together to stimulate fresh ideas related to re search in the critical areas of produc tivity. “The lack of productivity has re sulted in a spiraling inflation and the loss of America’s competitive edge in many industrial areas that at one time were totally dominated by our nation,” Page said. “Engineers will bear much of the responsiblity for devising ways to increase America’s productivity.” Page and others from the College of Engineering, including Dr. James Earle, coordinator of next year’s gathering, attended the 89th annual ASEE conference held earlier this summer at the University of South ern California at Los Angeles. Earle said engineering educators and industry representatives will be at Texas A&M for five days, holding meetings on a variety of engineer ing-related topics and hearing 100 presentations. Assisting Earle in preparing for what is expected to be the largest conference ever held on the campus for this length of time are Drs. Ed Red, William Ledbetter, Tim Cop- pinger and Robert Parent. Advance planning makes it easy Breakfast can be tasty and quick Staff photo by Greg Gammon