The Battalion Serving the University community 75 No. 158 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, June 9, 1982 'e the d, 1 effects effects, i Lucas’ I a gtc, play] reatingjJ na l prodiil Nicolas I n e“)succtl srael invasion of Lebanon aises fears of fifth war C1 'ig perfil east. DeFt| eeiallycot; his role at tilarly s ■'ise to ^ f Oneoli United Press International Iraeli invasion troops controlled It of southern Lebanon, crushing ■ last Palestinian resistance and jilting air and tank battles with Sy- Bts that raised fears today the con- , . Jcould escalate into a fifth Middle sali- F Wan || y T^Blumbling north across Lebanon at a/!»ly tw ' ce ebeir expected pace, an )davi (“■nated 25,000 Israeli troops back- |by tanks and warplanes pushed to Mediterranean coast city of [tour, only 12 miles south of tck. ate awaits I decide e watchtil n findoul rek III. t the United Nations Security ncil, the United States Tuesday a resolution condemning jel for ignoring a cease-fire call. $ vote was 14-1, with only ihington opposed, he Palestinian Liberation Orga- don sought Soviet and Arab help, id Iran said it was prepared to send troops. Cuban President Fidel Castro called on members of the Non- Aligned Movement to “mobilize all its forces” to aid. Israel today held 50 miles of coast south of Beirut and appeared to con trol nearly half the country, which is only 130 miles long and smaller than Connecticut. Israeli forces today were mopping up resistance from the PLO army, estimated to number at least 6,000. Israeli military radio reports said Tuesday their forces appear to have advanced north to about the east-west DamurZahle and Damascus-Beirut highways that cut the nation roughly in half. Severing the road to Damas cus would isolate Syrian troops in Beirut. The Israeli army said by early to day their total casualties were 32 dead, 144 wounded, seven missing and one captured. The total Palesti nian losses were not known, but were far higher. A military spokesman in Tel Aviv said Israeli forces Tuesday captured the port of Sidon, Lebanon’s third largest city 23 miles south of Beirut, and were clamping control on the area between Sidon and Jezzine, 13 miles to the east. The spokesman said 50 to 60 rebels died in Sidon, while sources said hun dreds of Palestinian rebels and an un specified number of Syrian soldiers were captured in that fighting. Launched Sunday and called “Operation Peace in Galilee,” the in vasion is designed to crush forever the PLO’s ability to bombard north ern Israel from Lebanon. Israeli forces also fought tank bat tles with Syrian troops Tuesday and shot down six Syrian MiG fighters. Syria has 25,000 troops in Lebanon, some of them only 7 miles from the Israeli forces. Two of the Soviet-built MiGs were shot down over the Galilee Panhandle — the first time Syrian jets have been downed over Israel since the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, the military com mand said. The escalating combat raised fears of another all-out Middle East War. PLO leader Yasser Arafat, his forces left in disarray, urged Moscow and Arab nations to come to their aid. Iran, offering to mobilize its “politic al, military and economic resources” against Israel, was given permission to use Syria as a staging point. Secretary of State Alexander Haig said Arafat’s call was viewed with “grave concern.” He said U.S. milit ary supplies to Israel will continue pending a decision on whether the Begin government violated U.S. law by using U.S. arms. icurity Council tries to condemn Israel U.S. vetoes U.N. resolution United Press International |NITED NATIONS — The Un- ed States vetoed a Security Council Solution that condemned Israel for ;aoring two cease-fire calls in Leba- J), and Arab leaders immediately light an emergency debate today in ii General Assembly, llhe vote on the resolution late Tuesday night was 14-1, but the sole negative vote by the United States automatically killed it under U.N. rules that give major powers the right to overrule the majority. “This resolution ... is not suffi ciently balanced to accomplish the ob jective of ending the cycle of violence alcony collapses; spection follows by Hope E. Paasch Battalion Staff liter a water-soaked balcony col led late in May, university officials Jinvestigating the structural condi- tfn of the remaining College Avenue tried student apartments. The balcony fell while four men life standing on it, and although no me was seriously injured, two sus- ained severely bruised elbows and i pulled a muscle in his leg. | The apartments, which house rried students, have been a prob- I since they were constructed about ^ears ago, Maintenance Foreman nneth Melson said. |“The roofs don’t have any over- Ing and rain water just runs down [side of the building. We’ve always 1 a problem with those apartments ing when it rains,” Melson said. iHe also pointed out that using un- jeaied yellow pine to construct the ■conies was a mistake to begin with. ITf we replace all the balconies, ve’ll use treated wood and possibly |tal,” Melson said. }reg Powell, one of those who had In on the balcony, said: “It could k been a lot worse than it was. I’m ly concerned that it doesn’t happen |in.” Powell lives in the apartment Jere the balcony fell from. |‘We had never noticed any prob- iis with the balcony before, not ven any creaking or shifting,” he ■Apartment Manager Frank K. icolas issued a letter to all residents lith similar balconies warning them p to go out on their balconies. ■Powell said he thought the notices should have been distributed before the accident, since Nicolas told him ! weak balcony supports had been known about for two years. The problem has existed for sever al years, Nicolas said. Since last Au gust, he has been working with the Physical Plant to come up with possi ble solutions. Before the incident, Nicolas said, some of the balconies had been rein forced with angle iron or 4x4 posts. Powell’s apartment was not one of those. The extent of the damage is not yet known, Associate Director of Busi ness Services Gerald Smith said. “We inspected every balcony,” Smith said. “I haven’t seen the official report, but I understand that we may take all the balconies down. We would have to remove some of the siding to make a more thorough investiga tion.” Physical Plant Director Joe Estill said: “We’ll have to actually vacate and strip down one of the units to deter mine how serious the problem is.” Possible solutions to the problem may include extending all the roofs, installing gutters, replacing all the balconies or any combination of those, Nicolas said. Ed Kozlowski, associate director for maintenance and modification at the Physical Plant, recommended that all the balconies be removed. Financ ing any major renovation of the apartments could be difficult, since they are not state-supported. Most re pairs and maintenance are paid for by rent, but rent income may not be large enough to handle a major mod ification. Sources for raising the necessary funds might include private contribu tions, issuing bonds or raising the rent at the apartments. and establishing the conditions for a just and lasting peace,” U.S. Ambassa dor Jeane Kirkpatrick told the council after the vote. Apparently referring to U.S. en voy Philip Habib’s current talks in Israel, she said: “my government is currently engaged in every possible effort to bring the violence to an end. We shall continue to do so.” Arab League Ambassador Clovis Maksoud immediately said the Arab states would meet today to call the U.N. General Assembly into an emergency special session to debate the war. Vice President George Bush, head of the administration’s special situa tion group, officially was to make “just a courtesy call” today on Secret ary General Javier Perez de Cuellar and General Assembly President Ismat Kittani, but he was expected to discuss Lebanon. After attempting in private to draft an acceptable resolution throughout the day, the Security Council went into a late-night public meeting and Spain’s Ambassador Jaime de Pinies immediately submitted the resolu tion. It condemned Israel for ignoring the council’s two cease-fire calls adopted unanimously over the weekend, demanded all hostilities in Lebanon stop within six hours and reiterated its demand Israel withdraw from Lebanon. After the vote, Zehdi Labib Terzi, representative of the Palestine Liber ation Organization, said again “the United States has chosen to- be a minority of one in its support for mass murder, a campaign of genocide, and the annihilation of a people.” Terzi accused Washington of being “a party to the aggression against Lebanon.” British, Argentine forces renew battle United Press International Britain said it was in firm control today of two more coastal settlements near the Falklands capital of Stanley following a day of deadly air and sea battles. Argentina damaged three British ships. Instead of the expected attack on the island capital, the clear skies Tues day brought a British assault on the communities of Fitzroy and Bluff Cove on Fitzroy Bay, an inlet 15 miles southwest of Stanley. “There is no obstacle in the way of Argentine withdrawal except the Argentines,” Prime Minister Mar garet Thatcher told Parliament. “We shall now have to take by force what the Argentines would not give up.” At the same time, the first major air and sea battle in the Falkland Is lands in eight days erupted, but Bri tain refused to say if the Argentine air attack was aimed at a seaborne inva sion of the small towns. Britain’s Ministry of Defense said the frigate Plymouth and two landing ships unloading supplies were dam aged in the Tuesday evening air strike. But Britain said today it had downed six Argentine jets, including at least four Mirages, and damaged staff photo by David Fisher The only way to travel Myron and Norma Wiles, from La Crescent, Calif., are touring the country for five weeks on their motorcycle. If they get tired, all they have to do is pull over and climb into the tent they pull behind them. They stopped at Texas A&M to help graduate student Billy Cornelius, from Wichita Falls, demonstrate interviewing to his English 104 students. Reagan campaigns against Marxists four others that were unidentified. Argentina said its troops smashed a British attempt to form a new beach head in the Fitzroy area, causing heavy casualties and destroying most of the supplies landed. The Joint Chiefs of Staff said a British frigate and two landing ships were sunk and a fourth ship was disabled. “We can say that this moment is a decisive one,” Gen. Oswaldo Garcia of Argentina’s South Atlantic theater said. But British Defense Ministry spokesman Ian McDonald said late Tuesday elements of Britain’s recent ly landed 5th Infantry Brigade of 3,000 men “are now firmly estab lished at Fitzroy settlement and Bluff Cove.” McDonald said five wounded ser vicemen from the Plymouth, which carries 235 men, were transferred to another ship and were undergoing medical treatment. He said the land ing ships Sir Tristram and Sir Gala- had also suffered some damage. The break in the lull in major fight ing came shortly after the navy said Britain has landed nearly 9,000 troops on the islands, building for the final battle for Stanley. United Press International WINDSOR, England — President Reagan is urging the West to join a “crusade for freedom” in a struggle against the Marxist world, but admits “we must be cautious about forcing the pace of change.” Reagan made his appeal for a “global campaign” to sell democracy in a historic address to the British Par liament at Westminister Tuesday, de scribed as a “triurnplk’ by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The president was meeting Thatcher over breakfast at her No. 10 Downing Street residence today to conclude his three-day pageantry- filled visit to Britain, which included a royal banquet at Windsor Castle Tuesday night. In Britain, Reagan became the first American president to address the House of Commons and the House of Lords, and the first to be a guest at Queen Elizabeth II’s 900-year-old Windsor Castle outside London. Reagan was scheduled to fly to Bonn where in a speech later today to the German parliament he proposes a mutual reduction of NATO and War saw Pact troops to 700,000 on each side. Regents to discuss planning, building Items for discussion with the Plan ning and Building Committee are ex pected to highlight this month’s Texas A&M System Board of Regents meeting beginning today. Appropriations to be considered include $65,000 to supplement an earlier appropriation of $15,000 fora detailed design of the system chancel lor’s residence at the University. Members of the Planning and Building Committee will also consid er construction requests for modifica tions of the Veterinary Medical Com plex and a new chemistry building on the Texas A&M campus as well as several requests for other branches of the system. Regents are also expected to con sider a feasibility study for the expan sion of Easterwood Airport at the meeting. Committees scheduled to meet to day are the Campus Hotel Commit tee, the Committee for Service Units, the Committee on Mineral Leases and the Planning and Building Com mittee. The combined board will convene on Thursday and Friday. 'ost Oak Mall competes with area businesses By Terry Duran Battalion Staff espite the increase in competition Dm stores in the relatively new Post ftkMall, Bryan-College Station mer- lants aren’t about to throw in the towd. ■ In fact a large number feel that the »s of business they’ve experienced is ■nporary and the eventual result of le mall will be added prosperity for le entire area, including many non- Ipst Oak stores. ■ Post Oak Mall, at the East Bypass lid Highway 30, is the latest effort by Itrepreneurs to keep area residents ■om fleeing the area to shop for re jail goods. As the third major multi- lore conglomeration with more than just a handful of facilities, it is by far le largest: Post Oak’s 90 businesses under one roof more than double lulpepper Plaza’s 40 stores on Texas Avenue in College Station and Manor East’s 36 at Texas and Villa Maria in Bryan. Post Oak’s Feb. 17 grand opening included about 700,000 square feet divided among 82 businesses, includ ing four department stores — Beall’s, Wilson’s, Sears and Dillard’s. Recent openings have increased the number to 90. Although the new mall has in creased competition for many businesses in the area, those affected say the damage isn’t terminal by any means. Susan Daly is the marketing dire ctor for Culpepper Properties, which owns Manor East, Culpepper Plaza, University Center (including Skaggs and Plitt Theaters) and Sulmar Cen ter, a smaller complex in Bryan. “Of course it affected us (when Post Oak opened),” she sai . “It affected all retail in this area. When you drop a million square feet into a market, it’s got to do something. “It’s affecting our Saturday sales more than anything, though,” she said, “which is kind of understand able. If you have four or five hours to shop, you’ll go to the mall because it’s nice and new and because of the atmosphere. On weekdays we (Cul pepper and Manor East) are closer, more convenient.” The clothing stores have been hurt the worst, she said, because of the abundance of clothing stores in Post Oak: 26 of Post Oak’s 90 stores sell mainly apparel. Jewelry stores have also been hurt: the new mall added eight new shops to the B-CS area, which already had 15 such businesses. For instance, both the Manor East and Post Oak malls have Zale’s stores. Manor East Zale’s manager Robert Dale said sales at his store have drop ped 20 to 25 percent since the open ing of the new Post Oak Zale’s — but he said he thinks the worst is over, no place to go but back up. “We’ll have to reevaluate our mer chandise,” he said, “reevaluate our customers, and get back to the basics, which are services to the customer. “Sales for other businesses here in the mall (Manor East) have been hurt, too. I don’t think it will ever be the same again — not for a while — at least a year or two.” Managers of most other stores in Manor East declined to comment on their sales figures. Most agreed they had been hurt, but not irreparably by any means. Manor East Mall manager Paul Zuelky said asa whole, the new mall had not been a problem. A few stores have even experienced increased sales, he said. “Our sales are going to increase again,” Dale said. Stores which did a large volume of business previously have found that people don’t always want to go out to Post Oak, “especially the ones that live closer to Manor East,” he added. Beall’s also has a stores in Manor East and the manager there, Bob Bin- ford, tells a familiar story: “We were hurt pretty bad at first (in February), but we started coming back in March. We had pretty much turned around within 30 to 45 days, and now we’re not off very much from our sales at this time last year.” Both Beall’s stores offer basically the same merchandise at the same prices, in accordance with See POST OAK page 12 inside Classified 10 Local 3 National 8 Opinions 2 Sports 13 State 3 What’s Up 3 forecast Today’s Forecast: Sunny and hot today, high of 95. low of 72. Same through Thursday. 20 percent chance of rain through Thursday.