ai THe Batta I Serving the University community i a S:jl. 76 No. 170 USPS 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, July 7, 1983 u ltbdiv;l TUD doubles grant r CS development by Kelley Smith Battalion Staff (liege Station will receive a 1,000 grant from the department Housing and Urban Development Bie development of lower income eas, a spokesperson from U.S. Sen. B Tower’s office announced Bnesday. The grant is twice the Ibunt the city has received in pre- aus years. ■onditions of the Community De- lopment Block Grant state that the oney must be used for programs ■ as housing assistance, street con- don and park improvements, JKE Stevens, community develop- ent coordinator for College Station, id. |■'he grant is given yearly to cities IBnated as entitlement cities if the j■itions are met. In previous years, College Station’s appropriation has been about $300,000. The primary reasons for the in crease, Stevens said, are the results of the 1980 census. The census showed a rapid population growth for the area and a higher number of lower income residents. The higher number of low income residents resulted because the census includes many students in that categ ory, he said. The program bases much of the criteria for the grants on the amount of lower income residents, Stevens said. “The grant is provided to the city to design and implement programs that will benefit lower income residents,” he said. The work provided for by the grant will be confined to the lowers income areas of the city, Stevens said. st apply money, which is specifically reserved for the program by the U.S. govern ment. In the application the city must specify for which programs the city will use the money. The application was approved by the College Station City Council. The city was notified before it sub mitted the application that the amount of the grant would be in creased. A large portion of the funds, which should be received in the next few weeks, will go to an on-going housing program. The funds also will be used to begin street and park improvement and construction programs that should begin in the fall. “We’re going to be working along the same lines,” Stevens said of where the money would be used. “But on a larger scale.” killing may accelerate death penalty appeals fnVC in United Press International ^ WASHINGTON — The Supreme (ftllfifltpurt, in a major death penalty rul- p-fP" g,upheld 6-3 Wednesday a new leg- ir shortcut that could accelerate the ■ of executions nationwide. ■cting in the case of Thomas Bare- a Texas murderer who came in 11 hours of being executed last iry, the justices in essence ruled id not deserve a last legal appeal could have been put to death. Tie capital punishment ruling, h has major repercussions for the 202 Death Row prisoners, speeds ^ processing of last-minute appeals bth condemned inmates who have 1 but exhausted ways of prolonging leir lives. ■From now on, when an execution ^imminent a federal appeals court lay compress the time it usually takes Bully consider a prisoner’s legal Bns, give a hurried rejection and let Rexecution take place on schedule. |“Although the (5th U.S. Circuit) rtof Appeals moved swiftly to de- e the stay, this does not mean that Itreatment of the merits was cursory or inadequate,” Justice Byron White wrote for the court. “On the contrary, the court’s re solution reflects careful considera tion,” he said. While the court’s handling of Bare foot’s case was “tolerable,” White said, that “is not to suggest that its course should be accepted as the norm or as the preferred procedure.” Instead, White suggested the appeals court adopt clear guidelines for the “fair and efficient considera tion” of last-minute death penalty appeals but said they may include “procedures that allow a decision on the merits of an appeal accompanying the denial of a stay.” Barefoot’s case raised the issue of how last-minute requests for stays of execution should be handled by fed eral appeals courts, generally the next-to-last hope for condemned prisoners. The topic grows in import as more and more condemned prisoners ex haust the last of their appeals. In spelling out the new guidelines, White said appeals courts “may adopt expedited procedures” provided the prisoner “has adequate opportunity to address the merits (of the case) and knows that he is expected to so.” “If appropriate notice is provided, argument on the merits may be heard at the same time the motion for a stay is considered, and the court may thereafter render a single opinion de ciding both the merits and the mo tion,” he said. If time before execution is so short the prisoner’s claims cannot be argued and decided carefully, the court said, the execution should be postponed. In Barefoot’s case, the appeals court took only seven days from the filing of his request for a postpone ment to hear arguments and decide there was no merit to Barefoot’s con stitutional challenges and no reason to delay his execution. Barefoot, 37, was scheduled to be executed by injection Jan. 24 for the August 1978 shooting death of policeman Carl Levin of Marker Heights. staff photo by Brenda Davidson Won’t someone open up a window? Workers were busy Wednesday installing windows in Sbisa Dining Hall. The dining hall, which was built in 1912, still contains many of its original window frames and glass. Sbisa was named after Bernard Sbisa, who served as steward of the mess hall for 50 years after coming to Texas A&M College in 1878. Iranian jet hijacked United Press International PARIS — French authorities re versed themselves and granted per mission for a hijacked Iranian jet to land in Paris after the pilot warned the armed air pirates were threaten ing their 185 hostages, airport offi cials said Thursday. The jet, which left Kuwait late Wednesday once the hijackers re leased 186 of their hostages, circled over Geneva for about an hour wait ing for approval to enter French airs pace. Permission was at first denied, according to air control officials, but was granted when the plane’s pilot said he and others on board were being threatened with guns. There was no indication which of several Paris-area airports the Boeing 747 would fly to or whether the French government set any condi tions for the landing rights. There was no immediate report on the hijackers’ demands, if any. The jumbo jet was refueled in Kuwait and the hijackers set off late Wednesday with 185 male hostages on a flight they expected would take them to Paris. tuerrillas extend execution deadline to today United Press International IAIROBI, Kenya — Guerrillas :atening to kill five Western aid )rkers Wednesday in the southern Tan extended their execution >dline, giving negotiators a day to leet their ransom demands, diplo ts and relief agency officials said. Despite the extension until this lorning, there was no indication the Tncies involved would meet the de- ids of clothes, cash and drugs, di- la ts said. Negotiators established a two- mte radio contact with the guerril- i shortly after dawn and the five hostages, including two Americans, were presumed to be alive. “There have been ongoing nego tiations and there has been an exten sion of the deadline until Thursday,” a Sudanese embassy spokesman said. Aid agency negotiators and West ern diplomatic sources confirmed the extension. Wednesday’s 12 noon deadline passed with no definitive word on the fate of the hostages until news of the extension reached Nairobi from Juba in the southern Sudan. The radio contact was the shortest since the hostages were taken June 23, a Sudanese embassy spokesman said. “The contact was with the guerril las and no one was permitted to speak with the hostages,” the spokesman said. “We presume they are still alive.” The rebels seized the five aid work ers in the east African nation’s remote Boma National Park and threatened to kill them today unless relief agen cies hand over $189,000 in cash and almost the equivalent in clothes, food and medicine. Western diplomats in Nairobi said Tuesday negotiations had reached a “super-sensitive stage.” “Our trust is in God and we will be praying for a miracle,” said a spokes man for the Across relief agency, which has been handling the negotia tions with the guerrillas of the South Sudan Liberation Front who kidnap ped the five June 23. But Sudan’s ambassador to Nairobi Ibrahim Ayoub said, “We are expect ing a breakthrough soon. The talks have had a positive tone and the guer rillas have treated the hostages in a humane fashion. “Based on negotiations in the last two days we don’t think that some thing disasterous will happen,” Ayoub said Tuesday. “We do not think they will be harmed in any way.” He said his government and relief agency negotiators had spoken by radio with the guerrillas and each of the captives. “They all said they were in good health and cheerful,” Ayoub said. The negotiations were being con ducted via shortwave radio from the southern Sudanese town of Juba, ab out 200 miles from where the guerril las were holding the hostages. The guerrillas, fighting to separate the mainly black and Christian south ern Sudan from the predominantly Arab, Moslem northern part, have dropped earlier demands for broad cast time on the Voice of America and British Broadcasting Corp. radio net works. The hostages have been identified as John Haspels, 36, of Lyons, Kan., Ron Pontier, 29, of Clermont, Fla., Martin Overduin, 32, a pilot from Komoka, Ontario, Willem Noort, a Dutch missionary and Alois Tscheidt, a West German zoologist. Cyclotron Yoke arrival spurs building by Angel Stokes Battalion Staff Construction of the machines in the new Texas A&M cyclotron be gan last week with the arrival of the iron yoke, the largest single piece of the cyclotron. The building housing the machinery was recently completed after about five months of construc tion. Texas A&M engineers and physi cists are doing most of the construc tion, said Dr. Dave Youngblood, di rector of the Cyclotron Institute. He said that although the yoke was built elsewhere, much of the small equip ment is being made in workshops on campus. The expansion, funded by the University and the Robert A. Welch Foundation of Houston, will cost approximately $7 million. Youngblood said he hopes the cyclotron will be operable by 1985, but it will not be in full operation until 1986 or 1987. “Its very complicated equipment and may take months to get working properly,” he said. The two most important compo nents of the cyclotron are the iron yoke and the circular wire that car ries the current that generates a magnetic field, Youngblood said. The yoke, which weighs approxi mately 100 tons, will surround the circular wire, he said, so that the magnetic field can be guided and confined to the shape needed to change atomic nuclei into high- energy particles used for sciehtific experiments. The new cyclotron will include a highly advanced superconducting accelerator. There are only two su perconducting accelerators in the United States. There also is one in Canada and one in Italy. Very few superconducting accelerators are being planned be cause many countries probably don’t have the technology needed, Youngblood said. An advantage of the cyclotron is that students can get “hands-on” ex perience in research with scientists in addition to classroom work, he said. There are now 16 students working on research at the cyc lotron. Along with graduate research, juniors and seniors are working on projects. The cyclotron now operates 24 hours a day, because of the demand of users, he said. When the new equipment is working there will be an increase in research. He also said there will be a signifi cant demand for use of the facility by world-wide users. The demand will try to be accommodated, he said. The iron yoke for the new cyclotron weighs 100 tons. Add-drops end next week, class begins Friday Classes for the second summer session begin Friday. Late registra tion will continue through Tuesday, which also is the last day to add new courses. Wednesday is the last day to drop courses with no record. Students graduating in August must apply for their degrees be July 15. inside Classified Local. . . . Opinions Sports. .. State .... National. forecast Clear to partly cloudy skies today with a high of 92. Easterly winds of around 10 to 15 mph. The low tonight near 72. Partly sunny skies Friday with a high near 91.