Dressing up for a night at the Rigoletto opera See page 4 Cougars roll to wild, easy tourney victory over Ladies See page 11 The Battalion Serving the University community Vol. 75 No. 85 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Friday, January 29, 1982 Ringleaders of kidnapping suspected in other acts United Press International ■VICENZA, Italy — The apparent ringleaders of the 42-day kidnapping of American Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier were well known to police as a sort of “Bonnie and Clyde” of the ter- frorist underworld, press reports said today. I Antonio Savasta, 27, and his girl friend, Emilia Libera, 28, were the lihost important Red Brigades mem bers among the five arrested in the Padua apartment where police found and freed Dozier on Thursday. E Two of the others arrested were Emanuela Frascella, 20, a student, and Cesare Di Lonardo, 22, both un known to police before their arrests. R The fifth terrorist captured in the 90-second raid was not immediately identified by police. But he was be lieved to be another obscure member of the extremist organization. Savasta and Libera were seemingly harmless students at the time they first made press headlines in Febru ary 1980 when they fought a gunbat- tle with police outside the railroad sta tion at Cagliari, Sardinia. Both escaped. By coincidence, Savasta and Libera were sentenced in absentia to 30 years imprisonment by a court in Cagliari on Thursday for attempting to set up a Red Brigades “column” in Sardinia. In the investigation that followed the Sardinia gunbattle, police found evidence implicating Savasta in the 1978 kidnapping of former Prime Minister Aldo Moro, who was mur dered by his Red Brigades captors. Police also believed Savasta and his girlfriend played roles in three Red Brigades political kidnappings dur ing 1981 and took part in several attacks on police. Savasta was the head of the Red Brigades in the Venice region, police said. It was the Venice “column” that masterminded the Dozier kidnap- ping. Meanwhile at the U.S. military base in Vicenza, public affairs spokesman Sgt. George Poole told reporters to day that Dozier spent a comfortable night. The spokesman declined to give other details, but Dozier was scheduled to appear at a news confer ence at the base at 4 p.m. (10 a.m. EST) today. The 50-year-old Dozier was freed by a police blitz on the hideout Thurs day at Padua, 24 miles southeast of Vicenza in northern Italy, as a terror ist pointed a gun at the general’s head. The NATO officer was reported in fine shape after the ordeal. As the anti-terrorist squad was Photo by Karen Kaley kicking in the door to the Red Bri gades hideout, Dozier’s wife, Judith, 47, and his daughter, Cheryl, 22, were visiting friends in Wiesbaden, West Germany. They immediately flew to Italy for a reunion Thursday evening. “They were all alone in the room, but there’s no doubt the reunion was nothing less than highly emotional,” said Sgt. George Poole, a spokesman at the base where Dozier was under observation. Dozier, chief of administration and logistics at NATO’s southern Europe land forces headquarters at nearby Verona, was kidnapped from his home Dec. 17 by four Red Brigades men disguised as plumbers. The terrorists knocked him uncon scious, stuffed him into a trunk and carried him away. Mrs. Dozier was left in the apartment tied in chains. Reagan wants Dallas United Press International WASHINGTON — Republican National Chairman Richard Richards says the city of Dallas is the clear first choice of President Reagan for the site of the 1984 Republican Conven tion. And, said Richards Thursday, “We will, of course, do everything possible to accommodate the president’s re quest to give preference to Dallas.” So, although the GOP committee has received “letters of interest” from Photo by John Ryan Smile for the camera Clay Rippenhagen, a senior industrial engineering major from Houston, passes the time with his canine friend on a bench in front of the new Academic and Agency Building. Senator blames plan rejection on Clements Scaffolds and ladders crowd the hallways finish in order to meet the scheduled of Post Oak Mall as workers hurry to opening date on Feb. 17. Coming soon Effects of mall not known by Bernie Fette Battalion Reporter ;; More than 2,000 jobs will be cre ated by the opening of the new Post Oak Mall in College Station, but the effect those hirings will have on an already healthy job market and a his torically low unemployment rate won’t be known for several weeks, said Walter Baker, manager of the Texas Employment Commission in Bryan. “People love to work in new places,” Baker said. “And thejob mar ket here is very healthy and very com petitive. One of the larger stores has already had more than 500 appli cants.” However, since it takes at least six veeks to compile employment fi gures, it should take about that long to determine how the local job market will be affected by the new mall. The business generated by the mall also may have a serious effect on the business of other shopping centers in Bryan-College Station, but the mall’s developer predicts the mall ultimately will improve quality, service and busi ness volume in the area. The new mall, scheduled to open Feb. 17, will enclose more than 1 mil lion square feet of shopping area, said Eugene Schimpf III, project manager of the mall and representative of CBL 8c Associates Inc. in Chattanooga, Tenn., developers and owners of the mall. Schimpf said the new mall will be about four times the size of Manor East Mall and seven times the size of Culpepper Plaza. “Initially there will be a drastic effect on the other malls, lessening their business,” Schimpf said. But af ter a surge of business, expected to last about six months, business should level off for the other shopping cen ters, he said. Owners of other major shopping centers in the area realize they may experience a slump in business, but do not expect the slump to last six months, nor do they say the Post Oak Mall will hurt their business. “Everyone will be affected by the grand opening,” said Susan Daly, marketing and PR director of Cul pepper Properties Inc., owners of Manor East Mall, Culpepper Plaza and the Skaggs Shopping Center. “But we should be able to bounce back by April after the surge — we’re not worried at all,” she said. Daly said the Bryan-College Sta tion community is large enough to easily support all existing shopping centers plus the new mall, especially since Manor East and the Post Oak Mall will serve different clienteles. The Post Oak Mall primarily will serve the “higher spenders,” she said, while Manor East and the other cen ters will cater to the “lower spenders.” Schimpf said the mall should in crease business at all shopping centers in Bryan-College Station. More peo ple will choose to shop in Bryan and College Station instead of traveling to Houston and other larger cities, he said. Detroit, Kansas City, St. Louis and Atlanta it may not be much of a con test. “While Dallas is clearly the presi dent’s first choice,” said Richards, “the site committee and the RNC must, as President Reagan requested, be ‘satisfied with the financial, legal and logistical arrangements offered by Dallas.’” It would be the first major party convention for Dallas. The last major party convention held in Texas was in 1928 in Houston when the Democrats nominated New York Gov. A1 Smith to run against Herbert Hoover. Republican Gov. William Clements first suggested Dallas to Reagan in a letter to the president last year. Reagan replied, in a letter released by the Republican committee, “I think that Dallas would be an excel lent city in which to hold the conven tion. “By a copy of this letter to Dick Richards, chairman of the RNC, I am asking him to inform the members of the committee on the site as soon as they have been elected of my prefer ence for Dallas, assuming the approp riate officials of the city of Dallas issue a formal invitation to the RNC to hold the 1984 convention there,” Reagan 'wrote. The eight members of the site com mittee will be announced today, and Richards said the GOP convention is tentatively scheduled for Aug. 20, 1984. by Jean Kiser Battalion Reporter Texas Gov. Bill Clements played a key role in the U.S. Justice Depart ment’s rejection of the Texas House and Senate redistricting plans Tues day, State Sen. Kent Caperton, D— Bryan, said. The Justice Department Tuesday rejected the plans to reapportion elec toral representatives because they violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The federal officials said the plans would dilute the voting strength of Mexican-Americans and blacks. “The Senate passed a plan that was a good plan, but Gov. Bill Clements didn’t like it so he vetoed it,” Caper- ton said, “it went to the (Legislative) Redistricting Board, (but) he didn’t like that plan so he and his cronies filed a lawsuit.” The plans rejected by the Justice Department had been approved by the all—Democrat Legislative Redis tricting Board. Clements, a Republi can, agreed with the findings of the Justice Department and asked that a three-judge federal panel in Dallas be able to draw new district lines for the legislature. This was granted and the same panel will be responsible for drawing up temporary districts to serve the state until a plan is submitted and approved by the Justice Department. Caperton said, “I suspect if he doesn’t like what the judges draw then he’s going to want to draw it again himself.” State senator Kent Caperton The Legislature dealt fairly with the redistricting process, Caperton said, but the governor doesn’t care about Texas voters who need to know what district they live in “if he thinks the interests of the Republican Party comes first.” “The mess that we have is a direct result. I’m convinced, of the governor and the kind of shortsighted leader ship that he’s tried to establish,” Caperton said. “I think he’s really shown his colors over the last months. The democratic nominee is going to have a good chance at beating him” in the fall gubernatorial race. Impulse disorders may lead to crimes United Press International SAN ANTONIO — A man who sets fire to buildings for the thrill of seeing the flames or a well-to-do woman who steals clothes she doesn’t need may be suffering from similar — yet widely varying — impulse disorders, says a psychiatrist studying pyromania and kleptomania. The uncontrollable urge to set fires (pyro mania) and to steal (kleptomania) are similar in that both involve the inability to control impulses. But psychiatrist James Turnbull of the University of Texas Health Science Cen ter says the similarity ends there. “Pyromania and kleptomania are diffe rent in that kleptomania is mainly a disorder of women and pyromania is mainly a dis order of men,” Turnbull said. “We are not exactly sure why so many women become kleptomaniacs, but it is probably because they are more exposed to the responsibilities of shopping and more likely to be in stores than men. “Pyromania probably is more common in men because all serious disorders associ ated with sexuality are more common in men. A significant number of men will have sexual fantasies about fires and setting fires.” Turnbull said pyromania was far more rare than kleptomania and much more diffi cult to treat. He said pyromaniacs often were of below-average intelligence and were abused as children, and therefore, had more deep-rooted psychological problems than kleptomaniacs. Some pyromaniacs, described by Turnbull as “would-be rescuers” help firefighters ex tinguish the fires they set, while others try to be heroes by attempting rescues before fire fighters arrive. He said pyromaniacs who leave the fire then go home to watch it on television news are the most dangerous and difficult to treat “because they are unemotionally involved. The fire is just an object to them.” “There is very little you can do with those people except lock them up because one day they are going to kill people.” The prognosis for kleptomaniacs is better, the psychiatrist said. Usually, the urge to steal can be traced to frustrations in the kleptoma niac’s personal life. Once the personal prob lems are resolved, the impulse to steal dis appears. inside Classified P a g e 8 Local page 3 Opinions . P a g e 2 State P a g e ^ State/National page 6 Sports . page 11 What’s Up P a g e 1^ forecast Today’s forecast: mostly cloudy skies with a high in the mid-70s; low in the upper 50s. Chance of rain 30 percent, with an increase to 60 percent Saturday.