The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 21, 1983, Image 8

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    Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 21, 1983
Counseling
continued from page 1
Individual counseling
usually consists of an initial
session with a counselor, fol
lowed by a battery of tests
assigned by the counselor,
which can range from the
Strong-Campbell test to per
sonality and values tests,
Lewis said.
Following the tests is a fol
low-up session in which the
tests are evaluated. From
there, more individual ses
sions may be called for, de
pending upon the student, he
said.
He stresses, however, that
the counselors will not make
students’ decisions for them.
“We can’t look at a test and tell
them what to do,” Lewis said.
“We don’t want to be in that
business.”
The third program the Stu
dent Counseling Service
offers is the career motivation
program, which is designed to
help students clarify their
values and decide what’s im
portant to them, Lewis said.
The program involves two
afternoons and about six
hours of work, he said, adding
that it is primarily for gifted
students with a 3.2 grade-
point ratio or better, but is
offered for other students as
well.
He said that the program is
geared more toward gifted
students because they may
have difficulty deciding on a
career simply because of the
great number of Fields open to
them.
The career motivation
program tests and evaluates
values rather than personality
traits, Lewis said. Values, he
explained, are different from
personality traits in that one’s
values are chosen while per
sonality traits, for the most
part, are ingrained.
For more information ab
out the three programs the
Student Counseling Service
offers, students can drop by
the service’s office on the first
floor of the Academic Build
ing or phone 845-1651.
The office will be relocated
to the third floor of the
YMCA Building in October.
Nuclear
pro and
rallies include
con marchers
United Press International
Peace activists vowed to block
ade military installations and
weapons factories nationwide
Monday following a weekend of
sparsely attended anti-nuclear
rallies that denounced recent
missile tests as “an ominous step
toward nuclear war.”
Pro-nuclear marchers also
had their say in three days of
protests, comparing the Soviet
Politburo to gangsters who must
be kept in line by peace through
strength.
The protests in at least eight
states were sparked by the inau
gural testing late Friday of the
MX missile off the West Coast
and the failed test Sunday of a
Pershing-2 from the White
Sands Missile Range in New
Mexico.
“This morning’s test exposes
once again (President) Reagan’s
lunatic logic that arms reduc
tions will come only from escala
tion of First-strike weapons,”
peace activist Philip Berrigan
said Sunday.
Berrigan, a former Catholic
priest who has been jailed 40
times for non-violent civil dis
obedience, addressed an Albu
querque, N.M., rally sponsored
by the June Disarmament Coali
tion. He called on the people of
New Mexico to resist further
testing of First-strike weaponry
in their state and said “today’s
test of the Pershing 2 is an omi
nous step toward nuclear war.”
The demonstration, which
began June 11, was scheduled to
end Monday with a peaceful
effort to block a gate of the Kirt-
land Air Force Base-Sandia Na
tional Laboratory complex,
nuclear weapons management
center. Other protests were
planned Monday at nuclear
weapons research facilities, nuc
lear manufacturing companies
and military installations, in
cluding the GTE Sylvania plant
at Westboro, Mass., the Idaho
National Enginering Labora
tory at Boise, Idaho, the Electric
Boat Shipyard at Groton, Conn.,
and the Lawrence Livermore
Laboratory at Livermore, Calif.
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United Press International
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swimming pool, was ruled
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Vincent DiMaio said Monday.
> Joseph Pioeowski, 36, a con
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of his wrists was tied to the chair
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Castro’s spies ‘effective’
United Press International
MIAMI — Fidel Castro’s spy
network, so effective it has infil
trated virtually every anti-
Castro organization in the Un
ited States, has even helped FBI
agents foil assasination attempts
on the Cuban leader, officials
say.
“The Cubans have all the ex
ile organizations and even the
terrorist organizations thor
oughly penetrated,” said Wayne
Smith, a former State Depart
ment specialist on Cuban affairs.
Leaders of exile groups like
Brigade 2506, Alpha 66 and
Abdala all say they have encoun
tered Cuban spies in their midst,
according to a story in the Miami
Herald Sunday. A Cuban intelli
gence sources have been so
effective they have actually tip
ped off federal authorities on
planned attacks on the lives of
Cuban officials — including
Castro — the Herald reported.
In once such incident in the
fall of 1979, Castro had agreed
to speak at the United Nations in
New York. The Oct. 8 trip was to
be his first visit to the United
States in 19 years and Andres
Nazario Sargen, the head of
Alpha-66, planned with exile
lear Antonio Veciana to kill Cas
tro. But shortly before the visit,
an unidentified man in Miami
stepped out from a doorway and
shot Veciana behind the ear. He
was shaken but not seriously in
jured.
. “I believe Cuba was trying to
kill me because they knew we
were proceeding in a plot to kill
Castro,” Veciana said.
Several days later, the Cuban
government called U.S. officials
and told them of the plot to kill
Castro. The night before Cas
tro’s scheduled arrival, Secret
Service men and FBI agents
converged on Sargen.
seven others in a \
apartment.
Castro has longbt
out his intelligencenet
1961 speech, he expla
his spies, posing ;
C last roites,” slip iniotheii
the enemy and sabc
Federal officials sayC
not exaggerating.
“I can only say the
agents) have infiltrated:
not all, anti-Castro oil
lions,” said Arthur Nt
former head of the FBI
Miami.
Keith S
Bader .
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geology
John Paul celebrates inass. :
praises Rural Solidarity
United 1
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0.49 millio
United Press International
POZNAN, Poland — Pope
John Paul II, bringing his insis
tent pleas for democracy to Po
land’s industrial heartland,
Monday praised the outlawed
Rural Solidarity union and paid
tribute to the memory of work
ers slain in labor riots.
The Polish pope, as out
spoken halfway through his
second papal homecoming as at
its start, flew a long leg north
west to Poznan from Czestocho
wa before hopping south to the
smokestack city of Ktowice in a
14-hour working day.
In a mainly religious homily
at a mass for the beatification of
Polish nun Ursula Ledochows-
ka, John Paul cited the words of
the late Cardinal Stefan Wys-
zynski to the representatives of
rural Solidarity.
“We see dearly howjust is the
fight for the fundamental rights
of the human person,” the pope
quoted the cardinal as saying.
The pope fervently urged,
“You, farmers of the whole of
my homeland, keep in mind
these words.”
It was the pope’s first public
naming of one of the indepen
dent labor unions that sprang to
life a year after his 1979 Polish
visit only to be crushed by mar
tial law Dec. 13, 1981. Applause
greeted the pope’s reference to
Rural Solidarity, the banned far
mers union. At the end of the
mass, nearly every arm in the
half-million strong congrega
tion shot up in Solidarity’s V-
for-victory sign and sang “God
Bless Poland,” the union’s un
official anthem.
Poles attach great importance
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to anniversaries and John Paul’s
Poznan stop was six days short of
the anniversary of that city’s up
rising in 1956, when police kil
led scores of striking workers.
The pope said he wished “to
kneel and pay homage” at the
two crosses erected “in memory
of the victims of 1956.”
Increasingly often in recent
addresses, Paul has been using
the word “solidarity,” although
not in direct reference to the
banned union.
Poznan’s workers demons
trated their own solidarity by
unitedly volunteering to work
an extra Saturday so they would
be free to see the pope, who is in
their city only during working
hours. The bosses agreed and all
the city’s factories shut down
that day.
Sunday the pope made blunt,
repeated demands for “worker
solidarity,” for “freedom, justice
and social solidarity” and for re
newed “social dialogue” of the
kind that gave birth to the now-
banned Solidarity trade union
Iss than three yearsagaB^ent
“The visit of thepope# milllor
change the course uponf. ’ „
we liave embarked,"J H 10 ! lt . o f
nienl's chief
t Hood go
•T he government willi‘‘P^r
strengthen the socialistU
Ve? John Paul
nlinost angrily fought 0<><
676 Rmainten;
its course.
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at
Walesa.
“After l.OOOyearsofW
al experience, this naj
live its own life,” thepo|Xl
Still ahead for the pi
stops in Wroclaw, St. fc
Mountain and Krako'v-Bp^p^jy
asl the pope may .. lwa J- !hroi
piission,
Ke medici
The cliff-hangingisi^B at c
pope’s third meeting "fUgh” dru
ex-leader of SolidatjPcy.
pushed into the backfBe Chall
once the tension wentoufexperime
question of where and'Pnaercial d
will be. §987, was;
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lied dust
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