Texas A&M Battalion Serving the University community s into a bd deliver 15 0v iet Union ropov sail Soviets won fective ret teploymeit want mam spared as 't'inenu jor rei nils in 10 said, called for' accord 1 Soviet Ui 1 hundredii 'fNATOo and not •ivalent," ded his foreign thanpe; >pe andtl 76 No. 159 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, June 9, 1983 een nam te if and is, a posi him >r the Aft Nyerert the sui Hirce said staff photo by Peter Rocha and Dr. John Nagyvary displays a violin he carved and tence ol fcecially treated to duplicate the tonal quality of a lization ftradivarius instrument. Nagyvary spoke at the College Btion Lion’s Club breakfast Wednesday. I piolins made lo sound old ..J on?, ased by Angel Stokes Battalion Staff ew violins — which sound like B antiquated versions created by B Italian masters — soon may be available to musicians. ■ Dr. Joseph Nagyvary, a Texas Ai:M professor of biophysics and piochemistry, has developed a che- Kcal process that opens the cell ^alls of spruce wood, a material d for the construction of violin bodies. ■ At a College Station Lion’s Club bijeakfast Wednesday, Nagyvary said he believes the process dupli cates formulas used by Stradivar- iusand Guarneri, two violin mak ers during the 17th and 18th cen turies, whose violins are famous for their tonal quality. B Nagyvary said a Stradivarius cost $500,000, even if broken, and recently one sold for $1.2 million ,in South Korea. [Violinists cannot afford them y longer, he said, and many have Abandoned playing the old violins cause insurance is very expen- 10 7.1 ESDAY iting Fof Ivt ‘ , , Dl tlfl A violin can make or break a illiS 1'musician,” Nagyvary said. ■ New commercial violins sound terrible for a year, he said, but af- tei aging about 50 years they start jsounding better. wHe said he wants musicians to have the chance to own a good polin at a reasonable price. ■ Violinist Manuela Roller, a founder of the Bryan-College Sta- ried Stef tion Chamber Orchestra, demons- D Gravy Brated two of Nagyvary’s violins Dtatoesart itul an Italian violin made in 1753, Bo belonging to Nagyvary, at the {lion’s Club breakfast Wednesday.. B One of the violins was only two weeks old and had been carved by [the best violin maker in mainland ;(|hina, Nagyvary said. He said Xu Fu carved the outside and he -'fcarved the inside and treated the wood. I “It has no right to sound good,” he said. He said the violin which is six months old has a sweeter tone.' I Nagyvary said he has worked on the project for about 10 years, and has really become involved during the last four years. He studied the one otr itable ead am or Tea literature of the 16th Century to determine what violin makers used at that time. He made his breakthrough when he examined a piece of a cel lo made by Guarneri in 1660. He decided that treatment of the wood was the secret of the old violin makers. The cells in the wood he ex amined had millions of tubular holes, he said, but violins of lesser quality don’t have any holes. “New violins have too many overtones because the holes are closed,” he said. Those with open holes have no reverberations and a better tone. Nagyvary is now in the process of obtaining a patent for his che mical formula, which uses fungus to eat out the holes. Nagyvary uses gold in the violin’s finish to give the instru ment the golden brown color pre ferred by musicians. Nagyvary recently sold a violin to a musician in Chatanooga, Tenn., for $4,000. He said the price is reasonable because it takes 400 to 500 hours to make a violin. He said selling his instruments to performers establishes a value for them. He is interested in making and selling more, although he no lon ger carves them himself because it takes too much time. Instead, violin makers and students do the carving. “There’s no glory in the carv ing,” he said. Nagyvary said he personally has spent about $20,000 conducting the research on the violins because it is a hobby and is not connected with his work at Texas A&M. Nagyvary used to play the violin, but now he just researches. He said he still has improvements to make, but he believes he has pinpointed the major points in the process. Wednesday afternoon, Nagyv ary went to Roundtop for blind testing of his instruments by ex perts. He said the experts will try to determine the difference be tween his instruments and those of Stradivarius. University’s appropriation not as generous as before by Scott Griffin Battalion Staff The Texas Legislature’s recent budget appropriation for Texas A&M is not as benevolent as in pre vious years, says a University budget official. “The increases we got weren’t that generous if you compare them to past years,” said Clifton Lancaster, assis tant vice-chancellor for budgets at Texas A&M. While Texas A&M did get a 27.6 percent increase for the biennium, Lancaster said the increase is not sig nificant. “The money we received was con siderably lower than what we re quested,” he said. “But we expected it. We never get all we ask for.” However Lancaster did point out some special funding Texas A&M re ceived: • $180,000 for a public policy re source lab. • $100,000 for a military studies institute. • $ I million for teaching and labor atory equipment. • $945,000 for engineering lab equipment Lancaster said some of the special appropriations could be credited to the efforts of State Sen. Kent Caper- ton and State Rep. Bill Presnal. Included in the appropriations is a teacher salary increase of 4 percent for next year and 3 percent for 1985. Lancaster added that because of the money provided, no personnel cuts will be necessary and that the University will be able to maintain its current operating level. As far as other state schools and their appropriations are concerned, Lancaster said, “I don’t think we fared any better than anyone else. A lot of appropriations' are based on square footage, enrollment, etc., and the money we got was not essentially different from anyone else based on the formulas.” Prairie View A&M’s appropria tions were cut from $43 million from the last biennium to about $42 million for the next two years. “Prairie View lost some money be cause of a drop in enrollment from 5,600 to about 4,000,” Lancaster said. One plus for Prairie View, howev er, is that the state will continue to fund repairs and rehabilitation of ex isting buildings at the university. Lan caster said the Legislature has de cided to discontinue the same type of funds to most of the state schools. Begin defeats withdrawal plan United Press International Prime Minister Menachem Begin today easily defeated an opposition motion for a unilateral Israeli with drawal from Lebanon, blocking the most dramatic challenge yet to his government’s handling of the costly year-old war. The Knesset voted 55- 47 against opposition Labor Party’s motion after Defense Minister Moshe Arens ridiculed the proposal, saying Syrian troops would move into posi tions vacated by the Israeli army. The vote came amid mounting domestic criticism of the war, which has claimed at least 490 Israeli lives since the invasion of Lebanon June 6, 1982. Two more Israeli soldiers were reported killed in a car bomb blast in Beirut Wednesday, official Beirut radio said. Labor Party Chairman Shimon Peres’ motion would have Israel firsf leave the Shouf Mountains in favor of the Lebanese army and the multina tional force, which includes the Marines. They would act as a buffer between remaining Israeli and Syrian forces. In the next stage of the pull out, the Israelis would leave Lebanon. Peres reasoned that the pullout would force Syria to act and leave under pressure. “Is there anyone in this house who thinks it would be better for Israel for the Syrians and PLO to remain?” Arens asked Begin during the par liamentary session. On the eve of the motion, Israeli military intelligence chief Ehud Barak predicted that Syria would use any tactics — short of all-out war — to sabotage the Lebanese-Israeli agree ment and force Israeli troops out of Lebanon. In an interview published Tuesday by Beirut’s An Nahar Arab and International weekly, Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak said it appeared that Israel wants no im mediate change in Lebanon. “It is in Israel’s interest that foreign troops don’t pull out from Lebanon for some years to come while it con tinues building settlements in the West Bank and Gaza,” Mubarak said. “Soon the Palestinian problem will be forgotten. “By the end of next year the West Bank and Gaza will be so cluttered with settlements that it will be impos sible to remove them even by an all- out war.”Israel agreed in its May 17 accord with Lebanon to remove its 30,000 troops from Lebanon in 1976 to quell a civil war between leftist Mos lems and rightist Christians. staff photo by Eric Evan Lee Need a lift? This crane, located at the Halbouty annex building site behind the Reed McDonald Building, moved into an area of soft dirt and almost tipped over Wednesday. The shovel of a bulldozer was placed at the front of the crane to lift it and prevent it from falling over. The crane then was moved to an area with solid ground. Property premiums to decrease United Press International AUSTIN — Texas homeowners will save between $8 and $24 a year on property insurance premiums begin ning this fall under new rates approved unanimously by the State Insurance Board. The average 3.8 percent reduction in Texas property insurance rates for homes, farms and ranches was approved by the board Wednesday and will be in effect from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30, 1985. The reduc tions will save Texas property owners an estimated $42 million a year. Renters’ insurance policies will de crease slightly for brick veneer apart ments and condominiums but will rise as much as 27.5 percent for buildings made of wood frame and other com positions for an average 10.2 percent statewide increase. The insurance industry, repre sented by the Texas Insurance Advis ory Association, had asked for a 13.5 percent increase in rates. “We realized coming into this hear ing today that there would probably be some disparity between what we would ask the board for as compared with what their staff recommended,” said TIAA spokesman Rick Gentry. “I would like to have seen the board come a little bit in our direction, so yes, I was disappointed.” The TIAA claimed the Insurance Board staff recommendation of a 3.8 percent average statewide reduction failed to take into account adequate profit margins and potential losses due to catastrophes such as hurri canes or tornadoes. Premium rates for individual homes will vary according to areas of the state, with policyholders in the Panhandle and West Texas paying the highest rates and homeowners in North and Central Texas paying the lowest. Under the new property insurance rates for basic homeowner coverage, owners of $50,000 brick homes in the Panhandle and West Texas would pay hom about $463 a year for general lomeowner insurance. The owners of similar homes in the Dallas area would pay $292; in the Gulf Coast area $297; in Houston $260; in San Antonio and South Texas $273. Rates for extended coverage — which insures homes for damage from additional perils like wind storms, hurricanes or hail — would vary from $164 a year in South and Central Texas to $345 in West Texas. Apartment or condominium ren ters would pay an average of between $219 and $253 a year for $20,000 worth of coverage compared to cur rent rates ranging between $224 and $259. Air Force hurling chickens United Press International TULLAHOMA, Tenn. — The Air Force is firing dead chickens out of a cannon at 700 mph, hurling them at airplanes to learn more about the damage caused by bird-plane colli sions. Since 1966 14 Air Force planes have crashed — and seven pilots have died — because a bird either broke a windshield or jammed an engine. officials said Wednesday. The “chicken gun,” located at the Arnold Engineering Development Center, is a Navy cannon that has been converted into a pressurized air gun. The chickens are hurled at air planes’ windshields and engines to determine how much damage a mid air collision can cause. A spokesman for the center, Sgt. John Blackburn, said both military and civilian aircraft have been tested during the past 10 years. Live chickens are obtained from local farmers and gassed. After being frozen and stored, Blackburn said, chickens are thawed for 24 hours be fore being fired at airplane windows or engines. smJicaraguan diplomat ordered home seeks asylum here KEY I United Press International W ORLEANS — Nicaraguan d with Bui General Augustin Alfaro, cri- 7 S auc ® Bof his country’s restriction on LXtPP e< : ch and reli S ion - decided to or Tea BP^dcal asylum in the United Gravy r s rat her than return home with loiceofaUlfdlow diplomats ordered out of getable [country. he five other heads of Nicara- consulates left the country by the 3 p.m. Wednesday deadline set by the government. Nicaragua’s six con sulates were ordered closed by the State Department in retaliation for the Sandinista government’s expul sion of three U.S. officials for alleged spying. But just as the deadline was draw ing near, Alfaro announced he had asked the United States for asylum. “I did apply for political asylum be cause I do not agree with the policies of Nicaragua, mostly with the restric tions they have imposed on the press and religion and the freedom of speech,” he said. Alfaro, who announced his deci sion at a hastily called news confer ence in front of the Federal Building where he applied for asylum, said he would remain near his Metairie home while awaiting word from the govern ment on his defection bid. “It has been a very hard and diffi cult day for me,” he said. “I don’t want to leave the United States.” Alfaro walked swiftly from the Federal Building where the Immigra tion and Naturalization Service is lo cated and stepped into a car driven by his wife, Amelia Zavala. In Washington, Duke Austin, a spokesman for the Immigration and Naturalization Service, confirmed Alfaro’s application for asylum. “As with anyone with an applica tion pending, he will not be removed. Until the claim is adjudicated, he will amain here as is the case with all fore ign nationals,” Austin said. Alfaro, who has two children, has lived in the New Orleans area for 10 years and has served as consul general for the past 10 months. inside Classified 10 Local 3 Opinions 2 Sports 11 State 4 National 7 forecast Partly cloudy skies today with a high of 88. Southeasterly winds of 10 to 15 mph. The low tonight near 69. Continued partly cloudy skies Friday with a high near 89.