mmu Texas Am ■ ■ ■ ■ The Battalion n/PageM 17,1® Serving the University community 1.75 No. 163 USPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, June 22, 1982 se foods, i and kdi .es of eso| h cancer, rinking, mbined li ng, “has an incn inckley sent to mental hospital United Press International [WASHINGTON (UPI) — John W. f h Jnckley ]r. was bound for a mental ° H 6 toc l a y as a result of Monday an resfi* ver( j| ct 0 f innocent by reason “•insanity. d be miH xh e j uc [g e j n case set a July 12 aring for Hinckley, presumably to lake formal his commitment to St. lizabeth’s Hospital for the mentally in Washington. Hinckley avoided a possible life se changeiptison term for nearly killing Presi- keup thai(J|{nt Ronald Reagan. Hinckley also should be sSpunded three others while spraying fhey indoBllets at the president, duced >v| Hinckley’s crime — witnessed by 1 broiled Billions of Americans through televi- :an sculpt e mostcei y statue classical sc sonal fatn ook like trough s Vera* ueen ees new randson United Press International ■LONDON — Queen Elizabeth to- ■ygot her first glimpse of the blue- led son born to Prince Charles and lincess Diana and Britain rejoiced liver the birth of its future king. The queen, in a pink dress, joined [veral family visitors to Princess ana’s bedside in St. Mary’s Hospital ijwest London at midmorning. An ecstatic Prince Charles was the tong the first of a stream of visitors [eluding Diana’s mother Frances BandKydd and her sister, 24-year- J Lady Jane, of classic™ “She looks radiant, absolutely 1st of wcBdiant, and the grandson is every- g on sudilng his father said he was last night to two. la lovely baby,” Mrs. Shand-Kydd evestheslBkl after visiting her daughter, d foraB An official proclamation on the r art piBckiron gate at Buckingham palace estate wasBad: “Her Royal Highness and her otheRev.Bn are both doing well.” 500 well- Unifrapshers waved Union Jacks and sang od Save the Queen.” For Diana, the 20-year-old former [ndergarten teacher from a blue- Jooded English family, her 16 hours in labor ended three hours before idnight Monday, with Charles at toredinal IP side. London bookmakers were busy cepting bets on what the baby auld be named, but got no hints TP) om r °y a l couple. Charles con- JU | ssed he and his strong-minded wife id “a bit of an argument” over the line already. Charles witnessed the birth, and nen — looking somewhat dazed but very happy — was mobbed by teary- I'ed wellwishers outside the hospital, ne young woman dashed forward jnd planted a kiss on his cheek. “I’m sorry you all had to wait so ng,” the 33-year-old heir to the rone told the 600 who waited roughout the day. They drowned Km out with choruses of “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow.” I “We rejoice,” said George Tho- las, speaker of the House of Com mons, when news of the royal birth tas announced to cheers in Parlia ment. London bookmakers accepted idds on the name of the child who will ie the 43rd British monarch since Villiam the Conquerer invaded Eng- and in 1066 — Edward? Louis? ieorge? James? The London gambling firm, Wil iam Hill, made George co-favorite vith James at odds of 7-2. But Louis vas another favorite because Charles ^ I Q evered his uncle Lord Louis Mount- r I 7 ratten, a English hero murdered in B 1979 by a terrorist bomb in Ireland. " Charles, with his typical modesty, >aid his 7-pound 1 'A-ounce, blond- maired son “is not too bad.” Then he ■evealed something about himself. It’s rather a grown-up thing, I’ve found,” Charles said of being a father. “It’s rather a shock.” But his reaction to the birth was “obviously elieved, delighted, marvelous.” mained at the Hi Museum 'as donaii im three u 'ays neef nn Ft ARl Pack 'Cl iJi sion replays — was never at issue, only his state of mind. Legal experts said the innocent verdict by the jury of mostly blue- collar and clerical workers is sure to trigger a new controversy over the use of the insanity defense. Eight of the twelve jurors who deli vered the verdict, bringing an end to Hinckley’s 42-day, $3 million trial, were mum about what went on in four days of deliberations and sought to resume their private lives. Most declined to even take tele phone calls and at least three did not immediately return home. A ninth juror, Virginia Smith, 61, wife of a retired city police officer, told reporters the panel considered all the evidence and concluded that all psychiatric experts at the trial agreed Hinckley had some kind of mental disorder or illness. One thing was certain: The jurors accepted at least some of Hinckley’s defense that he was driven by delu sions about winning the love of actress Jodie Foster and the movie “Taxi Driver” when he fired on the pres idential party on March 30, 1981. Court officials had identified Roy Jackson, a retired bluecollar worker, as the jury foreman, but Lawrence Coffey, 22, passed the verdict to the judge. “We made a decision,” Coffey told reporters awaiting his arrival home, then walked out of the room. Merryanna Swartz, daughter of a Milwaukee surgeon who has twice held jobs working with emotionally disturbed teenagers, repeated “no comment, no comment” as she rushed into her home. At the White House, President Reagan declined immediate com ment. “We’re just not going to make any comment,” Sarah Brady, wife of White House press secretary Jim Brady, who was shot in the head in the attack and suffered crippling brain damage, told United Press Interna tional. Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and Washington police officer Thomas Delahanty, both wounded by the exploding “Devasta tor” bullets Hinckley fired from a crowd as Reagan left a Washington hotel, also declined comment. The psychiatrists who testified in Hinckley’s defense said they were gratified at the outcome and relieved that the 27-year-old loner will receive treatment. At 6:50 p.m., the gruff voice of U.S. District Judge Barrington Par ker bellowed, “Not guilty by reason of insanity,” sending hushed gasps through the the courtroom. Hinckley, standing facing the jury with his hands clasped, looked at the ceiling, then at the floor and finally wiped tears from his eyes as the judge read the final counts. Hinckley’s father, Jack Hinckley, a wealthy Evergreen, Colo., oilman, put his hand on his head and his jaw dropped open. Then Jack Hinckley bowed his head. Hinckley’s mother, JoAnn, burst into tears and embraced her husband. Hinckley, the first would-be pres idential assassin to be acquitted by a jury in 150 years, will undergo psychiatric examinations pending a hearing within 50 days as is required by District of Columbia law. Israeli artillery pounds Beirut through night United Press International Israeli artillery pounded neighbor hoods of Beirut throughout the night, deepening fears that last- minute political maneuvering today could not save the Lebanese capital from a bloody Israeli invasion. Lebanon’s Council of National Sal vation called another meeting in search of an elusive Israeli- Palestinian compromise. But leftist leader Walid Jumblat said he was “very pessimistic” about avoiding an Israeli military entry into Beirut. Israeli troop convoys were re ported heading north toward Beirut, where Yasser Arafat and his 6,000 Palestine Liberation Organization were trapped and vowing to fight any Israeli attack. The second straight day of Israeli shelling escalated shortly after mid night but began subsiding at day break. It was aimed primarily at Pales tinian neighborhoods, but police sources said several nonPalestinian areas were also hit. The Palestine news agency WAFA said “numerous civilians” were killed or wounded in today’s round of shelling. In Washington, President Reagan urged Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin Monday to with draw his troops from Lebanon “ex peditiously.” The talks were de scribed by a U.S. official as “frank, bordering at times on direct and even blunt.” But Begin gave no indication he would withdraw until the PLO leader ship is destroyed. Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, the main architect of his na tion’s 3-week-old invasion of Leba non, warned that guerrillas have no immunity from attack and Israel would continue to fight them “with full force.” Sharon’s troops bombarded wide swaths of West Beirut on Monday, scoring 13 direct hits on a Palestinian hospital where six people recovering from earlier wounds died, including three children. The Monday shelling, the heaviest since Israel’s “ceasefire” with the Palestinians June 12, killed 20 people and wounded at least 75 others. Two Soviet diplomats were injured when a shell fell in the garden of the Soviet embassy. Arafat, angrily blaming the United States for the Israeli attack, predicted that Israel was preparing for a “big battle” in Beirut and rejected any no tion of surrender. “We are saying revolution until vic tory,” Arafat told ABC news. “Not until death.” Calling it “the American invasion,” the PLO leader said Washington has “already destroyed all your interest in this area by this stupid, shameful and dirty work.” 3 The seven-man Lebanese Council of National Salvation, which met for the first time Sunday, reportedly sought to avert a battle for Beirut by forcing Israeli troops back some 6 miles from Beirut in return for Pales tinian surrender of heavy weapons, an old suggestion that would be hard to implement. staff photo by David Fisher Rock steady Employees from Reed Drilling Bits had to elevate their truck to keep it still enough to drill through granite. Dale Ellis crawls up the back of the truck to adjust the rig while a member of the American Society of Engineering Education conference examines one of the drill bits. The bits are used in oilfields and mining quarries. The exhibit, in conjunction with the ASEE conference, will be here until Friday. Britain reviews defenses in wake of Falklands United Press International Military analysts expected today’s British defense review to propose cuts in the navy, despite the vital role Bri tain’s seapower played in retaking its far-flung colonies in the South Atlan tic from Argentina. The review also comes well in adv ance of the findings of a top-level in vestigation into the causes of the con flict that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is establishing. The aftermath of the war created an open crisis in Argentina, with the military junta in a fourth day of in tense efforts to choose a new presi dent following the ouster of Army strongman Leopoldo Galtieri last week. In Buenos Aires, a military official said some 9,000 Argentine prisoners of war returned by Britain to the southern base of Puerto Madryn were undergoing a “period of adaptation” before returning to their families. The British transport ship Norland delivered about 2,000 prisoners Monday. The British said they will hold ab out 1,000 Argentine officers, includ ing the Argentine commander on the Falklands, Gen. Mario Menendez, until Argentina formally declares an end to the war on all fronts. In London, Defense Secretary John Nott was expected to present to Parliament a series of proposals for cuts in the Royal Navy, which lost two frigates and two destroyers to Argen tine warplanes in the battle for the Falklands, 450 miles off the Argen tine coast. The defense ministry’s review of Britain’s armed forces had been de layed because of the Falklands war, but military analysts said they ex pected Nott would still propose big cuts in the Royal Navy’s surface fleet. The move would be certain to an ger the nation’s defense lobby and right-wing members of Thatcher’s ruling Conservative Party. Engineering faculty shortage creates problems by Cyndy Davis Battalion Staff A shortage of engineering faculty at American universities is causing problems, John W. Ceils, executive director of the Engineering Faculty Shortage Project, said Monday. The shortage is resulting in heavier teaching loads for individual professors and in an increased re liance on teaching assistants and part- time teachers, he told more than 300 members of the American Society for Engineering Education in Rudder Theater. Ceils said the nine-month-old pro ject has found that the shortage may have several causes. He emphasized that the problem, its causes and possi ble solutions are still being studied and that all conclusions reported were preliminary. One cause for the shortage might be that fewer people are getting mas ter’s and doctoral degrees, he said. In 1970, 3,500 doctorates in engineering were awarded; in 1980, only 2,500 were given. Poor faculty salaries may also account for the shortage. Ceils said. Holders of doctorates usually enter teaching as assistant professors, he said, and surveys of engineering edu cators show that assistant professors made about $22,474 last year. But at the same time, engineers with undergraduate degrees in pet roleum engineering were offered an average salary of $30,432. Faculty mobility could be another factor affecting shortages, he said. More engineers left teaching posi tions for industry than vice versa, and those that did leave industry for teaching preferred private over pub lic universities. Dr. Robert K. Armstrong, repre sentative of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co., said that not enough U.S. citizens are enrolled in graduate programs. Better fellowships are needed to attract them, he said, since foreigners currently receive almost half of the engineering doctorates given by American universities. The speakers proposed some solu tions to the teacher shortage. Ceils suggested improving com munication between industry and academia. “It’s not enough for industry to just give money,” he said, “they must get real communication going.” He suggested contract team teaching, in which a company teaches one to three courses in its field at a university for two or three years. Ceils also suggested improving teaching technology by making use of video teaching and microcomputers. But Armstrong said cooperation wasn’t going to be easy. Industry and academia have different missions. “Companies have a lot of things on their mind to keep them busy such as increased productivity and hiring problems,” he said. Local gas prices heading up, up, up by Hope E. Paasch Battalion Staff Gasoline prices in Bryan and Col lege Station are rising steadily and will continue to do so for the next few months, a local station manager said Monday. Bill Roberts, assistant manager of Piper’s Gulf in College Station, said although prices dropped more than 15 cents a gallon during spring, they are climbing again. “Prices are going up as fast as they came down, and they’re going to keep going up,” Roberts said. Self-service regular gasoline at the station is now $1.21, almost as high as it was before prices dropped. Gasoline in the tanks at the sta tion is owned by the distributor, Roberts said, which means the wholesale price of the gas is affected immediately when price increases are announced. “Our price on the pumps goes up when the distributor calls and tells us,” he said. “We pay for the gas as we sell it.” Although no shortage exists, an allocation system was started two weeks ago by the Gulf distributors, Roberts said. Piper’s was allocated more gallons than it has ever sold. “They just wanted to get the (allo cation) program started,” he said. L,eon Sevcik of Sevcik’s Texaco in Bryan, said his station is also on allo cation -- 100 per cent of last year’s sales plus up to 25 per cent more. Sevcik said the price of gasoline is highly dependent on the amount of driving people do. He said the price per gallon went up 2.5 cents Memo rial Day weekend, the largest single increase at his station. “If people will conserve by driv ing less, maybe it (the price) will level off,” he said. “If the demand goes up and the supply goes down even a little, you can expect the price to go up.” “They (oil companies) are trying to use up reserves to get prices and production back up again,” he said. “Our price has been going up about a cent a week. I expect that it will continue to for at least the rest of the summer. Ronnie Fox, owner of Aggieland Service Station in College Station, agrees that the price will go up as demand does. “History teaches us that at this time of year, people drive more and the price of gas goes up,” he said. Gasoline in the tanks at his station is owned by the distributor, but Fox said his prices don’t necessarily go up every time the distributor calls. “We’re hoping to take up the slack in volume,” he said. “We want to increase business by giving the consumer a break.” Fox’s station, a Mobil Oil Co. affi liate, is not under an allocation program. inside Classified 6 Local 3 National 8 Opinions 2 Sports 9 State 3 Whafs Up 3 forecast Today’s Forecast: High today in the mid 90s. Low tonight in the mid 70s. Highs and lows continuing the same through Wednesday. 40 per cent chance of rain today, decreas ing to 30 percent chance tonight and 20 percent chance Wednesday.