me Banal ion Serving the University community | Veil. 75 No. 186 USPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, August 12, 1982 > are 1 ev eryone ty close i in the „„ vingTuesdi, was within) 5 P- 1 Green and, lv ing in t«o e Mura hm the Car, nade even stone zie Sitiit): >an Tom over five, »t by an Nil 11, REDS!. Pedro Gt. and scored Valenzuela for the ime since A| and Los 2-0 records] ave been ia ofthemoai nts I’ve evs aseball,” i Lasorda 1 games staff photo by Octavio Garcia Itsa small world in a row. eaver, 5- BRAVES! ), Milt )i 15-8, gave; inning andi^ai Young an rchitectural design graduate student from Bartlesville and anice Frizzell, a graduate student from louston, look like giants when standing homer snan r Young’s proposed model of the irried l straight viA inning stret' moved to v -os Angela | :red their ei XPOS 3 -| nior Kera runs and j double and| cago to its 3 engineering-physics building. Frizzell also designed a model. Houston engineers, as well as the company with the contract for the construction of the building, evaluated the proposals. antitrust suit settled soon United Press International (VASHINGTON — A federal ge’s suggested changes in a settle- Jnt to break up American Tele tone & Telegraph Co. are being Reted with cautious optimism by Iny — including the government Id AT&T. ■On Wall Street, a top analyst pre- ■ted the revisions would remove Itmths of uncertainty in the market it AT&T holdings. U S. District Judge Harold Greene ounced Wednesday he will rove the settlement reached last uary between AT&T and the gov- Inment, but only if both sides agree :o his modifications. ■ Greene warned if they don’t agree he would reject the proposed settle- ient and order a resumption of the Vernment’s 7-year-old antitrust suit against the world’s largest company. AT&T and thejustice Department both expressed pleasure with what they called Greene’s acceptance of the overall concept of the proposed set tlement and said they immediately would begin talks to see if they, can agree to his changes. Their proposed consent decree calls for AT&T to spin off 22 major ity-owned telephone companies — about two-thirds of its $120 billion in assets — in exchange for dissolution of a 1956 government ban on what kinds of businesses it can enter, parti cularly the lucrative markets for new communications services. AT&T would retain its long distance operations and its manufac turing and research arms, Western Electric and Bell Laboratories. Greene listed 10 changes he wants to see in the agreement, most of them having to do with giving the spun-off companies greater freedom to enter new businesses. The judge also said the divested local telephone companies must be allowed to retain the Yellow Pages and to sell telephones and switch boards to customers. The original de cree lets the parent company handle both ventures. Greene gave the Justice Depart ment and AT&T 15 days to submit the decree, with the called-for changes, or to reject it. Assistant Attorney General Wil liam Baxter, the administration’s top antitrust official, had previously warned the government would re start its antitrust suit if the court tried to alter the terms of the settlement. ew GTE policy: only 10 Free local assistance calls I by Rebeca Zimmermann Battalion Staff If you use local telephone directory sistance, you may be surprised ten the operator asks for your — phone number. Don’t be — there’s a Bason she asks. I Aug. 1, General Telephone began 1 policy of allowing each phone line |1() free local directory assistance calls ice, iptr month. After those 10, the cus- Romer is charged 25 cents for each phone number he requests. — 1 GTE public affairs division mana ger John Wallace said to correctly re- lord calls to directory assistance, the Iperator answering the information ■quest asks for the caller’s number, rhe operator then records the re quest on a computer card. Wallace said the new charge for directory assistance places the cost of this service on the people who use it. Before the new policy was initiated, someone who seldom used directory assistance paid the same amount as someone who telephoned for assist ance 50 times, Wallace said. The cost was simply figured into the basic monthly phone rates. The 10-call limit applies to each separate phone line, he said. If there are two phone lines in one residence or business office, there is a 10- request limit for each line. But, exten sion phones on the same line are in cluded in the monthly limit. Two phone numbers may be re quested each time the customer calls directory assistance. So, up to 20 numbers may be obtained before a charge is assessed for requests. Calls from pay phones or hospitals and calls made by certified handicap ped people who have difficulty using the phone book are exempt from the service charge, Wallace said. And, callers don’t have to give their phone numbers to operators when calling long distance directory service because the call is automatically re corded by a computer, he said. Wallace said charges are not made .for long distance directory assistance because the service cost is offset by the long distance call which usually fol lows the request. Habib says solution close for Israel, PLO United Press International U.S. envoy Philip Habib, “a couple of days” from a peaceful solution to the Lebanon war, took his shuttle di plomacy back to Beirut today where Israeli warplanes lashed Palestinian targets and shelling rocked the capital. The Israeli military, accusing Palestinian guerrillas of violating the unofficial cease-fire, said its jets went into action early this morning, after a night of rocket exchanges and gun fire. Habib returned to Beirut Wednes day from Jerusalem, saying he was satisfied about talks with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin on a com plex plan to remove the Palestine Liberation Organization from Lebanon. The envoy was meeting today with Lebanese officials on ending the 68- day war. “A diplomatic solution is very close,” Lebanese television quoted Habib as saying. “All we have to do is work out the details.” A senior Israeli official in Jeru salem agreed with his optimistic assessment, saying “there is reason to believe we are close to reaching agree ment. It’s a matter of a couple of days.” Military sources in Lebanon said the pullout from west Beirut by the outgunned and outnumbered PLO guerrillas could begin by the end of the week and be completed within 15 days. The Israelis coupled nearly 12 hours of shelling, which intensified late Wednesday, with 40 bombing sorties by warplanes that covered west Beirut with a curtain of smoke. In an ominous comment, Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said Israel would not withdraw from Lebanon until Syria removed 40,000 troops stationed since the 1975-76 Lebanese civil war in the eastern Bek- ka Valley. Noting Israeli artillery is located only 16 miles from Damascus, Sharon said, “the Syrians will have to decide what they prefer.” Congress main obstacle Reagan pushes tax hike United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan took to the road to sell a $98.9 billion tax increase to the public and now hopes to use a proved selling pitch to win over a reluctant Con gress. During a three-hour visit to Mon tana Wednesday, Reagan hammered away at arguments that the White House hopes will comprise a formula for making the tax hike palatable to lawmakers with election-year jitters. The applause he heard in the West seemed more a general endorsement of his policies than for the tax bill. But Reagan and his advisers left con vinced they can make a formidable case to Congress on behalf of the package they say is necessary for eco nomic recovery. “You watch,” said one aide. “He’s pulled this off before. It may look like an uphill fight, but we’ve still got some time and his powers of persuasion.” Reagan arranged to use those pow ers today on at least three more de legations of House members — adding to the dozens he personally has lobbied at the White House in the past 10 days. The president kept up the private pressure Wednesday even during his visit to Montana by making phone calls from Air Force One to congress men as well as business groups that might aid White House lobbying. The administration is going to great lengths to convey the message Reagan already is winning over reluc tant members of Congress. As he boarded Air Force One Wednesday for the flight to Montana with Reagan, Rep. Ronald Marlenee, R-Mont., told reporters he had strong reservations about the tax bill and said it would fail by a 2-to-l margin. By the end of the flight, presiden tial aides were parading Marlenee be fore reporters to tell of a conversion he had undergone during a talk with Reagan aboard the plane. “The president is a very convincing man and his efforts to close tax loopholes and reduce the deficit de serve support,” Marlenee said. “I’m inclined to support him.” What of his earlier statements? “Well,” he replied, “I changed my mind.” In search of more public support and congressional converts, Reagan is considering giving a nationally tele vised speech on the tax package. Building program trying to catch up with needs by Dawson Clark Battalion Reporter Enrollment at Texas A&M Univer sity is rising faster than the buildings are. So, despite a steady building program, Texas A&M University faces a recurring million-square-foot classroom and laboratory space shor tage. Now the University is attempting to balance the numbers and available space by limiting enrollment and in creasing construction. Dr. Charles McCandless, interim vice-president for academic affairs, said his office conducts an annual study to determine the need for clas sroom space. He said the study indi cates a shortage every year, and th^t increasing enrollment makes the balancing act difficult. “We grow at such a rate that when we add all of these buildings it only accounts for the growth at that time,” McCandless said. “So we haven’t real ly closed the deficit. If we can stabilize the enrollment, then our construction will start to catch up and we can re move the deficit.” McCandless cited a paragraph in the 1982-83 Texas A&M catalog which states that the University can limit enrollment if the quality of edu cation is lowered because of inadequ ate facilities (page 12, paragraph 5). He said that’s why the minimum admission standards were raised. “We tried to find which groups of students had the least likelihood of completing a degree at A&M,” McCandless said. “And the standards were adjusted so that those who were least likely to get a degree were those who were weeded out.” Since 1977, the University has added the Heldenfels, Kleburg, Soil and Crop Sciences, Harrington Edu cation and Academic and Agencies buildings. The total cost of these buildings was more than $44 million. Recently, the Board of Regents appropriated more than $10 million to help further reduce the shortage of laboratory and classroom space. Included in the latest appropria tion is $140,000 for preliminary de sign of an engineering/physics build ing. The new facility, which will house 18 research and teaching labs and 12 classrooms, is expected to cost about $21.5 million. The building should be ready for occupancy by the spring of 1986. The regents also recently approved the construction of a horticulture/ forest sciences building and an addi tion to the Halbouty Geosciences Building. The horticulture/forest sci ences building will provide 38 re search and teaching laboratories and four lecture/seminar rooms. The Hal bouty expansion will add 12 research and teaching laboratories to the ex isting facility. Both projects are expected to be completed during the summer of 1984 at a combined cost of $10,695,000. Paul Stephens, manager of the faci lities planning division, said the new buildings will create additional lab space. Thus, crowded conditions else where on campus will be relieved. McCandless said all engineering research labs will be moved to the building under construction south of the Zachry Engineering Center. This change will free many laboratories for use in undergraduate education. Another possible solution to the shortage of laboratory space would involve scheduling labs from 7 to 10 p.m., McCandless said. But, he said, that solution is one most University administrators would rather avoid. “Most students and faculty mem bers aren’t particularly pleased about having labs at night,” he said. “We have a lot of student organizations and a large and active intramural program. We think all of these things certainly contributed to the education of the student. So, we’d like for stu dents to have their evenings free to participate in those activities,” Study shows floating good for students Wet behind the ears, but learning fast By Hope E. Paasch Battalion Staff Studying while afloat in a sensory isolation tank makes difficult con cepts easier to grasp, according to results of a study conducted during the spring semester by a Texas A&M professor. For two years, Dr. Thomas Taylor, a visiting assistant professor of chemistry, has used elec troencephalographs (EEGs) to study the learning process. He used EEGs, which measure brain activity, to see how flotation affects learning. Recent research using EEGs shows that learning occurs on sever al different levels. The lowest learning level is sim ple memorization, the next is under standing a concept as it is presented and the highest level is called synth esis thinking. On this learning level, several different concepts are com bined to form a new' idea. Statistics from Taylor’s study on flotation learning show that subjects who learned while floating per formed much better than the con trol group when answering ques tions which required synthesis thinking. “There’s no question that the ex perimental group learned more,” he said, “but where they learned is the most important point. People who floated learned at a different cognitive level. The results show that the more difficult the concept, the bigger the difference in the per formance of the two groups.” To eliminate as many variables as possible, the subjects were chosen from 453 original volunteers. After extensive screening, 40 females were selected. Complete statistics were gathered for 20 of the subjects. Only females were used in the study because basic physiological differences in the way men and women think do exist, Taylor said. During the study, the control group and the experimental group studied by listening to learning tapes. The control group for the ex- jperimenOistenedjofiie^a^esjvhile^ lying on a couch in a quiet, dark room. The experimental group flo ated while they listened. “The only difference in the two groups was that the experimental group was floating,” Taylor said. Floating is a method of relaxation that consists of lying in a sensory isolation tank, suspended in 10 in ches of warm salt water. The com pletely enclosed tank is 8 feet long and 4 feet wide. Floating sessions usually last one hour. The study was funded by the Float to Relax Corp. The Denver- based corporation has set up several Float to Relax facilities across the UnitedStams^includin^^five^i^ Texas. John Moran is the co-owner and manager of the College Station facility, which opened last spring. “We wanted someone to prove what we already know,” Moran said. “I don’t have a Ph.D. so I can’t tell the world it really works. A&M has international credibility. “I believe we are on the frontier of the mind. We are exploring a way to open up to the other 90 percent (of the brain) that we are typically told we never use.” Taylor said he is interested in EEC research because he doesn’t think exams are a suitable diagnostic tool. inside Classified 4 Opinions 2 Sports 9 State 3 Whatsup 8 forecast Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain; highs in the mid- 90s; low in the mid-70s.