The Battalion Serving the University community )l, 76 No, 123 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas '4 villagers shot by army, il Salvadoran peasants say United Press International iAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — asants from a western hamlet told o U.S. congressmen Salvadoran ny troops rounded up 74 villagers, d their hands behind the backs and >tthem in the head. In a meeting Tuesday at the San vador archdiocese office, villagers im the Las Hoyas land reform farm Sonsonate province said on the ;ht of Feb. 22 some 200 soldiers ived at the co-op and began round- ; up peasants. They told Reps. Bill Richardson, N.M., and James Oberstar, D- Minn., two men, aged 75 and 80, were among 74 peasants taken away by the troops. “The soldiers returned, but they had no prisoners, and we were very sad," said one man. “We found one friend tied with his hand behind and his head destroyed by bullets. He was 75 years old. “That’s how we found the rest of them, the same, with their heads des troyed and the hands behind them,” said the peasant spokesman. He blamed the soldiers for the killings. There have been no arrests in the killings at Las Hoyas, about 40 miles west of the capital. Oberstar said he and Richardson met Sonsonate army commander Col. Elmer Gonzalez Araujo, who claimed the dead peasants were leftist guerril las killed in a clash with government troops. “Col. Gonzalez Araujo said, ‘A Sal vadoran with a machete is a danger ous man,’” Oberstar recalled. “I said, ‘No colonel, a man with a machete is no match for a man with a gun.’” The lawmakers also visited prisons where 645 men and 8J women are jailed under Decree 507 that has sus pended most constitutional rights since 1980. Oberstar, who toured the capital’s jail for women, said Decree 507 was a “gross violation of human rights. We will urge the Salvadoran government to take steps to repeal this law.” Richardson, who visited the Mariona men’s prison, said he was im pressed with the amount of political freedom. Some prisoners keep post ers picturing revolutionary leaders like Ernesto “Che” Guevara in their cells. The Committee for Political Prisoners has an office in Mariona. ilection results in jeopardy; - hree candidates not on ballot by Robert McGlohon Battalion Staff [The names of three candidates u ling in student elections were left ill the ballot most of Tuesday morn- which may cause parts of the elec- n to be invalidated. The three candidates whose names re omitted are James C. Becker Jr., ididate for junior yell leader; Chip ath, candidate for engineering lator-at-large; and Jim Collins, jbhomore engineering candidate. I Election commissioner Les Asel |d he didn’t know how the error had I ppened. The ballot was proof read eral times, but the omission wasn’t ticed, he said. Asel said he didn’t know who made : mistake, but as election commis- Iner he accepts full responsibility. [ “It’s my error,” he said. “I am the leauthority and the sole operator of ^elections; therefore, anything that les wrong is my responsibility.” [The errors went unnoticed until about 10 a.m., when a candidate noticed the omission of Heath and Becker and informed election offi cials about the mistake, Asel said. Officials quickly corrected the error, he said. “They got back on the ballot very early this morning,” Asel said. “About an hour and a half after the polls opened they were back on the ballot. About 300 ballots had been cast at that time.” The omission of Collins wasn’t noticed until after noon, Asel said, but his name had been added to the ballot by 12:30 p.m. Election results will determine whether the elections affected will have to be repeated, Asel said. “I’ve got the ballots isolated that were voted on early,” he said. “I will look at those and I will see how many people voted in those races at that time. ' “We’re going to have to look at the gap between the winners and losers. We’re going to have to see how many votes difference there is. If there’s a 200-vote difference, there is really no way that I can say with 300 votes cast: ‘Jim got 200.’” The election will close at 6 p.m. today. Results will be announced shortly after midnight and posted outside the Student Government office at 12:30 a.m. Thursday. Candidates may appeal the election within 48 hours of the posting. “Everybody that feels that they didn’t get their fair deal is allowed to appeal the election results,” Asel said. Appeals originally are decided by Asel. If candidates are dissatisfied with his decision, they then may appeal to the Judicial Board, which has final authority in deciding elec tion appeals. If Asel or the Judicial Board decide that the early ballots would have affected the three elections, only those elections will be repeated, Asel said. He said the election commission doesn’t have enough money to repeat the entire election. Collins said he probably will file an appeal. “I’m not certain yet, but I feel that I probably will,” he said. “I’ve been running my own little survey about penciling in names and I’ve found that it’s often detrimental.” Corrections were made by writing the candidates names on the ballots in pencil. Even if the election is re-run, Col lins said, the results still won’t be the same as if the mistakes hadn’t been made. “It’s going to be a lot more difficult because a lot of people probably won’t be informed about it and know that it’s going on,” he said. “It probably will be more difficult to get people out because of the fact that the important positions will have already been de cided.” Heath said he has not decided whether he will appeal and Becker was not available for comment. 1,000 Texas farmers face bankruptcy Hightower says farmers need help United Press International [AUSTIN — Unless Congress acts »defer foreclosures on government- Icked farm loans, Texas agriculture mmissioner Jim Hightower says it 11 be “chopping off the hands that ed us.” Hightower told reporters Tuesday atabout 11,000 Texas farm families e teetering on the brink of bank- iptcy because they are facing forecl- iures on loans from the Farmers’ ome Administration. “We’re talking about the farm terators who produce the majority our food,” he said. “These are the inds you and I count on to feed us, id it is suicidal government policy to mp them off.” Hightower said 69 percent — the highest percentage in the nation — of the 16,000 Texas farmers who have loans from the FmHA are on the verge of foreclosure. There are about 185,000 farmers in Texas. A bill pending in Congress would defer farm foreclosures by FmHA and make emergency money avail able for additional loans. “This legislation is a pragmatic ac tion we can take this year to literally save thousands of farmers,” said Hightower. “And we must pass it right now.” Hightower said of the state’s more than 6,000 farmers who had FmHA operating loans last year, only about 600 were able to pay off their debts. “It’s important to realize that most farmers who might be considered poor managers were already out of business by 1982,” he said. “So those who went under last year and those who are facing the same prospect this year are good, efficient, productive farmers.” Hightower said the delinquency rate in Texas is higher than the na tional average of 59 percent because the cost of farming is higher. The har dest hit Texas growers are those who produce cotton and rice, he said. The delinquency rate in some Texas counties that produce mostly cotton and rice is running as high as 85 percent, he said. Rice and cotton farmers have been especially hard hit, said Hightower, because their cost of production high and the price of their products is de pressed. Asked about the chances of the fed eral legislation, Hightower said, “I have reason to believe we have a good shot at it.” The bill is sponsored in the U.S. House by Rep. Ed Jones, D- Tennessee, and in the Senate by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas. State Sen. Bill Sarpalius, D- Hereford, and Rep. Tip Hall, D- Ponder, are co-sponsoring a resolu tion in the Texas Legislature that urges Congress to approve the bill. Wednesday, March 30, 1983 staff photo by Bill Schulz A view of the Arab world Ali El-Jeryes, left, a senior mechanical engineering major from Amman, and Jamal Gutierrez, right, a junior civil engineering student from Nablus, wear traditional Arab dress and show hand-crafted objects from Arab countries in the Memorial Student Center. The display is part of International Week at Texas A&M. Court approves Braniff jet sale United Press International FORT WORTH — Bankrupt Bra niff International’s plan to sell 20 of its idled jets to People’s Express will be worth $ 140 million to the airline, with most of the money going to secured creditors, a spokesman said. Approximately $15 million will be used for continuing maintenance and training by Braniff personnel, said Bob Ferguson, Braniff vice president. A federal bankruptcyjudge Tues day approved bankrupt Braniff In ternational’s plan to sell the jets to People’s Express for $84 million. The purchase, approved by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Flowers, would double the size of the Newark, N.J.-based carrier which currently flies 21 737 aircraft. Part of the deal includes the lease of a 747 jet to PE for $50,000 per month for 5'A months and $250,000 for the next 48 months with an option to purchase the plane for either $25 million or $29 million, depending on when the option is exercised, Fergu son said. He said PE would use the 747 to begin flights between Newark and London, a route already approved by the Civil Aeronautics Board. Another part of the deal includes the sale of 20 727s for a net price of $4.2 million each. Braniff will be left with 32 727s once the deal is signed, Ferguson said. Although the contract does not compel PE to hire former Braniff workers, Ferguson indicated the car rier will look favorably on applica tions by such workers. Unlike Braniffs efforts to begin a joint operating venture with Califor nia-based Pacific Southwest Airlines, the PE deal met relatively little resist ance in Flowers’ court. “There were no competitors who attended the hearings and the various creditor groups resisted until the price was increased and then (they) basically agreed,” Ferguson said. He said Braniff first contacted PE as long ago as August or September of 1982 and “intensive discussions be gan about three weeks ago.” S X Ground Town 4 lassified 8 ,ocal 3 )pinions 2 ports 10 itate 4 National 9 ’olice Beat 4 rSoda jr visit, .ny ottiet notion, ilyat ng EKS 5 ad. 4/10/83 5 j inside Vhat’s up. forecast 14 Zloudy to partly cloudy skies today vith showers ending and a high of T Winds becoming northerly lear 10 mph. Clear to partly cloudy onight with a low of 49. Mostly lear skies Thursday with a high lear 77. Polls close at 6 Voting in Student Government elections will continue today at selected polling places on campus. Students may vote at the follow ing places until 6 p.m.: • Academic and Agency Building • Academic Building • Corps Quadrangle • Memorial Student Center • Zachry Engineering Center Preliminary election results will be reported at 12:30 a.m. Thursday on the second floor of the Animal Pavi lion. Results will be finalized at noon Thursday. If available, election results will be reported in Thursday’s issue of The Battalion. Appeals will be accepted begin ning at noon Thursday in the Stu dent Government office, 216 Anim al Pavilion. Runoffs will be held from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday. Women Editor’s note: This is the third part of a five-part series on the Corps of Cadets. by Melissa Adair Battalion Staff Like other cadets in the Corps, they do push-ups, have outfit runs and are subject to all the same rules and regulations. But there is one major difference — they are women. Women in the Corps are diffe rent, but they say they contribute to the Corps just like any male cadet. Valerie Sperandio, commanding officer of Company W-l, says that when she first joined the Corps, she was extremely apprehensive about it. “It’s real hard being a woman in the Corps,” Sperandio says. “You tend to jump to conclusions.” She says she used to think the men in the Corps resented her being there, but now she realizes that she is a part of the Corps just like all the other cadets. And Sperandio says she has a de finite role in the Corps. “Over the four years I’ve been here, I’ve come to the conclusion that my role has been to strengthen the position of women in the Corps — to help women become more a part of the Corps,” she says. Susan Melde, first sergeant for Company W-l, says all the women have contributed to the Corps. ‘just like other cadets’ “I think it’s important for men to learn how to work with women,” Melde says. “If there were no women in the Corps, the men might not see the importance of this.” But the reasons women join the Corps are varied. Sandra Phillips, a senior flight officer for Squadron 14, says she became interested in the Corps be cause she was an alternate for a Corps scholarship. Phillips didn’t get the scholarship but decided to join anyway. She stayed in the Corps because she became friends with the women in her outfit, Phillips says. She knew one woman who joined just because it was the only way she could get a room on campus, she says. But the woman stayed in the Corps because she also began to make many friends. Melde says she joined for two reasons. First, she says, she didn’t know anyone at the University and joining the Corps seemed like a good way to meet people. Second, she said she thought joining would help her scholastically. But many female cadets don’t stay in the organization just because of friendships. They take the Corps se riously. Of 13 senior female cadets, 1 1 are on contract and will enter the armed services when they graduate. Of 12 junior female cadets, 10 are on con tract. Despite their genuine interest in the Corps, the female cadets often are not taken seriously. Phillips says freshman and sopho more male cadets many times don’t respect junior and senior female cadets. But, Phillips says, she doesn’t let that affect her. “I have realized that the ones (the male cadets) who won’t come meet me like they are supposed to are really not worth meeting anyway,” she says. “So I don’t let it bother me.” Some of the women also say that many male cadets still have miscon ceptions about the female Corps members. Phillips says some men don’t be lieve the female cadets work as hard as the male cadets. “For example,” Phillips says, “men frequently ask if we actually do push-ups.” Sperandio says the men don’t see all the work the women do because the female cadets are somewhat iso lated in their separate dormitory. Perhaps one of the greatest obsta cles for women in the Corps is draw ing the line between being a woman and being a cadet. Phillips says: “You’ve got to learn to be a lady and play the Corps game at the same time. And that’s not al ways easy.” But the women don’t think being in the Corps has damaged their so cial lives much. Melde says she thinks she has had more dates because she is in the Corps. “Wearing this uniform I really stand out,” she says. “And so guys See CORPS, page 14