Battalion/Page II April 19, i Magician exposes tricks 'I of the trade for psychics See page 3 Secretaries keep offices running See page 4 ccess s last year, i since 19 78-79wlit[| i, Julius Erving w Toney added IS J 10-86 romp. Thtij oen in the first 4:5ii ten they outscord ke a 71-53 lead, ry Kenonscoredl! uirth quarter as tl ers to win their 2-104. The e third quarter but Kddie Johnsons®' < Kansas City plan was a costly d would have hai image in the osl renix. i, Ricky Green pouJ gh 35 points in thef(| e Jazz to a 128-11 ht straight pointsi| ive the Jazz a irows in the last Hi Texas A&M College Station, Texas Battalion Serving the University community Tuesday, April 20, 1982 Haig arrives home with small hopes nave/fy sets ).99 recall past riends on Wednesday •r mom! 10.99 449 . 3.89 by Betty Ann Reid Battalion Reporter Muster, when Aggies meet to remem- )er fellow students and former stu dents who have died, will be held Wednesday. The on-campus Muster ceremony will begin at 6:30 p.m. in G. Rollie Bfhite Coliseum. Other muster cere monies will be held world-wide. ■ The Brazos County A&M Club holds their Muster in conjunction frith the on-campus ceremony. The es of 23 students and 17 former dents from Brazos County who ivedied since the last Muster will be ed, Muster Chairman Bubba Cor rea said. ■'William B. Heye, division manager for industrial computers, a branch of ilxas Instruments, will give the main address. p Heye, Class of ’60, was a member of the Corps of Cadets and was Cadet Corps Commander during his senior year. Blhe Muster Committee, part of the iTraditions Council, is in charge of coordinating the Muster program — wlich includes speakers, the Ross Volunteers, the Singing Cadets, the Aggie Band, and the reading of the toll call of the absent. Muster was first held June 26, |883, and was designed to be a time for former students to relive their col lege days. ■ During the late 1890s, the Corps of Cadets made trips to the San Jacinto battlefield to participate in sham bat tles and maneuvers on April 21, the anniversary of Texas independence. In the early 1900s, a track and field day was held on April 21. When it was called off in 1903, students protested because they wanted a time to remem ber Texas independence. At this time, students also agreed to honor students and former students who had died. They decided that a living comrade would answer “Here” while a roll call for the absent was read. Muster grew from that time, and Aggies met in Europe and at army post in America during World War I. In 1923, former students began meeting in College Station “to meet old friends again and live over the days at College Station,” the Texas A&M “Inrol” said. In 1942, Muster gained national recognition when it was held at Corre- gidor Island in the Phillipines, 15 days before the fall of the island. At that time 25 men, led by General George Moore, Class of’08, held mus ter in the dim recesses of the island. Several additions have been made to the Muster ceremony since that time. A candle-lighting ceremony was added three years ago. As each name is called from the roll of the absent, a candle is lit. A fellowship barbecue also has been added. It is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. by the aerobics track. United Press International Secretary of State Alexander Haig arrived in Washington today from five days of what he called arduous bargaining with Argentina, hut Bri tain said his proposals for averting war over the Falkland Islands appeared unacceptable. Haig told newsmen at Andrews Air Force Base he would report to President Reagan on the latest peace proposals he described as “a compila tion of Argentina’s attitudes on the crisis by the British government.” “We had very arduous discussions in Argentina, and I have further de fined and delineated the position of that government (and) transferred those views to London where they are now being considered,” Haig said. He said he would be in touch with the British government on the plan and said he was neither “hopeful or unhopeful” the peace effort would succeed. “We are continuing to talk so we’ll see where it leads.” British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher called a meeting of her full Cabinet today to study the new peace plan, hut she indicated it would not be Prof backs Twain’s Huck Finn by Jennifer Carr Battalion Staff A Texas A&M University English professor has entered the debate over the appropriateness of Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” in school libraries. Dr. Robert Scott Kellner, who holds a doctorate in 19th century American literature, sees the charac ter of Jim as a model of morality — a father figure to Huck, and a man who is willing to fight for his freedom and his family. In early April, a school superinten dent at the Mark Twain School in Fairfax, Va. rejected requests by black parents to remove “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” from the read ing list. Parents now are protesting in Fair fax because they claim the book por trays a poor image of blacks, and they are particularly angered by its use of the word “nigger.” This is not the first attempt at ban ning Twain’s book. Efforts made to ban the book from school libraries fif teen years ago were unsuccessful. Kellner said blacks, while they might feel uncomfortable with the use of the word “nigger” in the book, should not feel uncomfortable with the character of Jim. “In ‘Huckleberry Finn,’ it is the black character Jim, referred to con stantly as ‘nigger Jim,’ who is the mod el of morality,” Kellner said. “And if being a nigger means being like Jim in ‘Huckleberry Finn,’ then it’s a pretty good thing to be a nigger. When Twain uses the word, it’s not in a de meaning sense. “If you were to pull a book of that nature off the shelves, where would you turn to in 19th century fiction for a black hero?” Kellner, in a revised version of an article written for the Mark Twain acceptable to Parliament. “The complex, difficult contents of the Haig message do not at first sight meet the requirements strongly ex pressed by Parliament, particularly on the paramount need for consider ing the wishes of the islanders,” a statemfent from the prime minister’s office said. “But it wiii be studied carefully,” said the statement, released while Haig was still in the air. Britain announced Monday it was sending 1,000 more paratroopers to join the 2,400 marines and several hundred other paratroopers on its 40-ship battle fleet, now estimated to be only a few days sailing time from the Falklands. Haig, looking drawn and tired be fore leaving Buenos Aires Monday, warned “war in the South Atlantic would be the greatest of tragedies and time indeed is running out.” Details of the plan were not dis closed, but reports in London and Buenos Aires said it called for admi nistration of the islands by the United States, Britain and Argentina while sovereignty was negotiated. Dr. Robert Scott Kellner Journal, wrote: “Twain’s language and imagery about the blacks in his stories work together as a mirror in which bigoted readers ultimately see themselves.” The racist language in Twain’s stories actually contains an element of satire in which the reader’s belief in the black stereotype is challenged, Kellner said. “You’ll find in most of his stories that the white people are mostly fools or charlatans or brutes of some sort,” Kellner said. He said he can understand how blacks might feel when they open the book and see the word “nigger,” but said he objects to censorship or ban ning of Twain’s works. “When it comes to art — and that’s what literature is — we have to keep in mind that art recreates life as it is, not as we would like it to be,” he said. “Huckleberry Finn” is popular in schools because it functions on many levels, Kellner said. It’s a story of a young boy growing to intellectual maturity, but it also explodes the myth of the Southern plantation tra- See page 12 Haig’s decision to report to Presi dent Reagan rather than fly to Lon don indicated he was not optimistic the plan would meet the approval of Britain, which has demanded with drawal of all Argentine troops and sovereignty over the islands. In Argentina, local news agencies quoted military officials as saying any plan that did not assure them of sovereignty over the disputed islands 450 miles east of its mainland was un acceptable. “The flag that was placed on the Malvinas islands will never be with drawn from there by Argentines,” In terior Minister Alfredo Saint Jean told the nation’s governors, using the Argentine name for the Falklands. Argentina has poured an estimated 9,000 troops into the Falklands since invading the disputed British colony April 2. A British Defense Ministry spokes man said latest reports indicate the bulk of the Argentine fleet remains at sea, but well outside the 200-mile blockade zone imposed by Britain a week ago. British nuclear submarines reportedly are enforcing the blockade. Negotiators may have U.S. budget United Press International WASHINGTON — By the end of today, budget negotiators hope to have a bipartisan spending plan acceptable to both President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill. Senate Republican Leader Ho ward Baker warned if there is no agreement this week, Congress would begin writing its own budget resolu tion — a move that could lead to chao tic debate in both chambers. Budget negotiators, who began their talks three weeks ago, planned their final meeting today. House Budget Committee Chairman James Jones, D-Okla., had mixed feelings: “I don’t think there’s going to be much trouble for the Republican and Democratic negotiators to agree, but we don’t have any way of judging what the president will do,” said Jones, one of the negotiators. Senate Finance Committee Chair man Bob Dole, R-Kan., another nego tiator, added, “The chances for the success of a compromise package are still 50-50: 50 percent Reagan and 50 percent O’Neill.” White House counselor Edwin Meese said late Monday, “We’ll know in the next 48 hours” whether a deal has been made on a budget com promise. “By that time we’ll have a general feel if it’s going to happen,” he told reporters at a state dinner for Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands. The negotiators include congres sional Republican and Democratic leaders and White House chief of staff James Baker. They arranged a final meeting today to try to complete a bipartisan budget compromise that would keep the 1983 deficit, now forecast at $101.9 billion, below $100 billion. wall ids ?.99 Journalist to examine policies involving energy Intentional neglect by government and industry of safe energy forms, s frnm n Iowp ^ P res ident Ronald Reagan’s views i (J lOV < on ener gy w jjj bg discussed tonight at tS, t©0 KOttlSi 8byan award-winningjournalist and Ids, camisters author. K Karl Grossman will speak on “Nuc lear Power, What Your Government Won’t Tell You” in a program spon- ■red by MSG Political Forum Com- lliittee. The program will be held in Rud- ider Forum. Admission is free. ■ Grossman also will present a slide r- ' — i and save! show featuring government docu ments and photographs. Grossman’s book concerning nuc lear cover-up has been heralded by such publications as “Publishers Weekly” and “Whole Life Times.” A journalism professor at State University of New York, College at Old Westbury and Long Island Uni versity, Grossman also hosts his own weekly television program and broad casts on WBAI and WREN radio in New York. Ground Zero calls for no nukes United Press International Ground Zero Week is only in its third day but its anti-nuclear message is quickly spreading and may evolve into the biggest peace movement of the 1980s. As activities mounted Monday from Boston to San Francisco, Assis tant Senate Democratic leader Alan Cranston said the nuclear arms race debate will be the key issue in political campaigns this fall and the 1984 pres- idental race. In Des Moines, Iowa, the state sen ate urged President Reagan to consid er a halt to the nuclear arms race. Similar action was taken earlier by Massachusetts, Oregon, Connecticut, Maine, Vermont, Minnesota and Wis consin. In Pittsburgh, the City Council adopted a resolution calling for a mutual and immediate freeze by the United States, the Soviet Union and other nuclear powers on the develop ment of nuclear weapons for the fu ture of mankind. Ground Zero is a non-partisan group founded by Roger Molander, a former Defense Department arms control expert and White House Na tional Security Council staff member. The organization is trying to de velop a grass-roots push to prevent nuclear war by explaining the type of horrors and devastation such a con frontation would produce. Its name is based on a military term for the point of a nuclear detonation. Ground Zero Week began Sunday with rallies, demonstrations and teach-ins on the steps of state capitols, the malls of colleges and the sanc tuaries of churches. inside Classified 6 Local 3 National 7 . Opinions 2 Sports 9 State 4 What’s Up 12 forecast Today’s Forecast: Cloudy and win dy with a 60 percent chance of rain ; high today in the low 70s; low tonight in the 50s. Wednesday’s forecast calls for cloudy skies with a high in the upper 60s.