;/ One in eight wives has breadwinner role See page 6 Texas ASM M V • The Battalion Serving the University community \lo\ 78 ho. 74 GSPS 0453110 18 pages College Station, Texas Monday, January 16, 1984 arines, ships s ie lead ime vr 9 poiE itribui eta Mate gunfire United Press International BEIRUT — U.S. Marines came linder fire Sunday and the battleship JSS New Jersey and destroyer USS attnail retaliated by unleashing their ive-inch guns at Moslem militia posi- jji ionseast of Beirut, U.S. officials said. It. Col. Charles Suits, a Pentagon spokesman in Washington, said the " darines retaliated with machine iirscom ! uns ’ howitzers and mortars before 1 quam i ,e wa >'ships joined in. ■ ^ ™ “The rounds from those ships President Reagan’s Middle East en voy, Donald Rumsfeld, arrived late Sunday from Israel, and went straight to a meeting with Nabih Berri, chief of the Shiite Moslem militia Amal which controls some of the suburbs around the U.S. Marine base, Beirut radio said. “They talked for two and a quarter hours about the security plan (for the disengagement of militia forces around Beirut) and the Israeli occu- the [he enti on I^Mmoiinted to approximately 120 midcoif o 92-91« uarter, wasa» amsspu- lie cout iIkes sea arter an ounds total, all of which were 5-inch ounds,” Suits said. Druze Moslem militiamen raked be Beirut airport area, where the larines are positioned, with sniper the ilM ire, forcing tfie facility to close at ab- akersani lUl 4 ; 30 p.m., state Beirut radio said, their it U.S. Marines were badly hit by iIimsiW Tound-aimed 23mm anti-aircraft lakshells, the radio network added. pat ion of south Lebanon,” said a spokesman for Berri. The naval bombardment was the 1 1th time U.S. warships off the coast of Lebanon have fired during the Lebanese warfare since September. The last time was Dec. 19 when two gunboats bombarded Syrian positions after U.S. reconnaissance flights re portedly came under fire. The United States has more than a dozen war ships off the Lebanese coast in two battle groups in support of 1,200 Marines ashore in peacekeeping force. Later, unidentified gunmen fired a rocket-propelled grenade at the west Beirut headquarters of the French contingent in the multinational peace-keeping force but there were no casualties, said Lt. Col. Philippe de Longeaux, a French spokesman. As flames rose from a Marine fuel dump at the airport, the facility was closed down for four hours and all traffic diverted to Cyprus. Airport workers dodged sniper fire and hid in the lower floors of the terminal. Salim Salam, head of Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines, denied an ear lier Beirut radio report that one of his planes had been hit and was on fire. Salam said the flames came from a fuel dump near the U.S. Marines who surround the airport. see MIDEAST page 14 betwefl 0^^ four th ioulfi iW pson k bount oints ar ts ■ w h [is on i throttk ^ isitiouS ||jj ote," sa* it of tj* gotten 1 vote. E p< convet rcent favor of conv® ions fof 1 some \A .‘ i; Pp '[ )UIS a f ,er disappearing from his . F «l>rag.2 missile Imi,, police said. ,i,i wit f° lce spokesman said a farmer’s h in ^ lo: 0llnc J Army Cpl. Liam Fowler, -amember of the 56th Field Artil- nuL 1 1 ^ a< ^ e ’ >ying asleep in her far- nil« ne T the lown °f Miesbach, 30 ^ south of Munich, at 6:15 a.m. Owl Sa , police were investigating her the Port Orange, Fla., soldier l:E om imong dential houti ront >lenn of lb 11 of 321 HANOVER, N.H. — A debate the eight Democratic pres- candidates erupted into a mg match between the two -runners Sunday, with John u accusing Walter Mondale of ngaging in “gobbledygook” and ondale calling Glenn’s charge baloney.” There were no clear winners or * n t ' le three-hour, free-for-all ( >ch was broadcast nationally from wtmouth College. The Glenn-Mondale exchange, set thei Xav' inan) ,(l instil* ttend strain' 1 arm allow' 11 roll-® help^ nt dons last y* 1 e :M RE inn- ’ andidates’ debate rupts into shouts United Press International following 2!/L> hours of gentlemanly discussion, became so heated fora few minutes that Jesse Jackson admo nished the two, “We have to conduct the affairs of this business in a serious vein.” Former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., also jumped into the fray. The exchange began after Mon dale, former vice president and ack nowledged front-runner for the Democratic nomination, outlined his program to cut federal deficits. Glenn, the Ohio senator and Mon dale’s closest rival, said with disgust: “That’s the same big gobbledygook we’ve been hearing for years.” “Is this going to be a Democratic Party that promises everything to ev erybody and runs up a $170 billion hill?” Glenn asked, using the figure he says Mondale’s campaign promises would cost. Finals up for vote today By MICHELLE POWE Stall writer The Faculty Senate will vote today on a resolution that would require il graduating seniors to take final ex aminations. If the Senate votes in favor of this policy change, it will recommend the change to the University Rules and Regulations Committee. The change would need final approval from Presi dent Frank E. Vandiver. The resolution for the policy change, proposed by the Senate’s ad hoc committee on academic stan dards, calls the practice of exempting degree candidates from final exami nations “a serious compromise with fair and equitable academic stan dards.” The meeting will be at 3:15 p.m. in 601 Rudder. All students are wel come, although only student body representatives will be allowed to address the Senate. Faculty Senate Speaker John J. McDermott, disting uished professor of philosophy, has allotted 20 minutes for comments from the student representatives. “I’m disgusted and tired of all the vague promises,” Glenn said adding that Mondale would add to the de ficits he has pledged to cut. photo by Dean Saito University of Houston’s Akeem Olajuwon and Texas A&M’s Jimmie Gilbert go for a rebound after a missed shot Saturday. Gilbert came down with this rebound but UH went on to win 70-64. See related stories on page 15. David Alders, speaker of the Stu dent Senate and the Student Senate representative to the Faculty Senate, says he opposes the resolution. He said the current policy is not de trimental to academic standards. The Student Senate passed a re solution last semester recommending that the current policy remain the same. Alders, who will address the Facul ty Senate today, said he feels certain the policy will be changed if the Facul ty Senate approves such a change today. The academic standards commit tee also recommended that the new policy, if adopted, should be put into effect before December 1985. see DEBATE page 14 See related editorial, page 2 Soldier feared kidnapped, located in farmyard United Press International i/? ^ * * GART, West Germany — Deri i encan so,dier feared kidnap- ound anti-nuclear activists was DU ho"' lde ^P ' r i a farmyard Sunday, was kidnapped by anti-nucleat activ ists who threatened to kill him, as he told his wife in a telephone call Saturday. The circumstances surrounding the incident were not immediately clear, but a U.S. military spokesman said police were investigating it as a kidnapping. “West German police are treating the incident as a kidnapping, and *hey are continuing their investigations, ’ said Maj. Anthony Maravola. Police said Fowler telephoned his wife twice Saturday to say he was in the hands of six Germans who threatened to kill him unless she arranged to have U.S. news media carry within 72 hours a statement that West Germans do not want Pershing- 2 and cruise nuclear missiles deployed in their country. Maravola, a spokesman at Fowler’s base in Schwaebisch-Gmuend, 150 miles northwest of where he was found, said that Fowler was returned by West German police to the base late Sunday. “He is apparently in good condi tion, although somewhat tired by his ordeal,” Maravola said. “He has beeen reunited with his wife and will be undergoing a medical examination by the U.S.military medical authorities,” he said. A police spokesman said Fowler’s red car, in which he disappeared, had not been found. “We are investigating all possibilities,” he said. Police found Fowler covered only with curtain material and suffering from exposure, the spokesman said. He was treated at a hospital and re leased. Fowler, last seen at 4 p.m. Friday, told his wife his car had been rammed by another vehicle just before six Ger mans climbed into his car and drove him around for several hours to con fuse him about his whereabouts, police said. Police Sunday were still searching for Fowler’s red Dodge. The West German government announced Dec. 30 that the first bat tery of U.S. Pershing-2 missiles de ployed to counter Soviet SS-20 mis siles aimed at Western Europe was operational. Sources familiar with the deploy ment said the missiles were positioned at Fowler’s field artillery brigade’s de pot, the scene of continuous anti nuclear demonstrations. A spokesman for the group lead ing demonstrations at the brigade headquarters denied Sunday any con nection with what he called “the alleged kidnapping.” A week ago, West German intelli gence officials warned that anti- American terrorists were planning attacks on U.S. bases because of the anti-nuclear movement’s failure to halt missile deployment. The soldier’s father, Kenneth Leo Fowler, said when contacted at his home in Port Orange Sunday that the family had heard from his son but would not comment further. tfenjor exam opinions gathered Students, faculty don’t In Today’s Battalion % BRIGID BROCKMAN Stall Writer lo iake , f'ii[ a ( r ^ cluat ’ n 8 sen i° r s have wl ?° were ques- Would lih 1 Battalion said they chan Red sn?L See the curre nt policy Woulfi i, l ‘ lat graduating seniors %p r > v , e to ^ke finals, and not p°ned l U e students ques- n ot hall , ' thou ght they should t ave to take finals. Tk dent letrf a . tl ^* on as k- e d a few stu- Sttidem R ?/ lheir °P in ions. 40,1 Sa *d he hS ^ residem Joe Jor- as hethoi,rri ket 1 le curre nt policy, lie also u mo . sl indents did, hut tllB Profpcc d idn’t think most of ‘Voudn° IS s Bared his opinion, not gain anything acade mically by making students take fin als,” he said. Preston Abbott, Corps of Cadets commander, simply said he would go along with any decision the r acui ty Senate made. Greg Hawkins, president ol the MSG council and directorate, said he really hadn’t thought about the issue, and he wasn’t concerned one way or the other. Kelli Kiesling, Residence Hal Association president, also said seniors should remain exempt from finals. , . . A recent poll conducted by an assistant political science professor showed that 77 percent of the facul ty at Texas A&M were opposed to the current policy. Dr. Jon R. Bond said the poll had three responses the faculty could choose if they were opposed to the policy, and the breakdown was as follows: 16 percent were opposed but could “live with it,” 29 percent were opposed and would like to see it changed and 32 percent were tot ally opposed. Responses were varied across the colleges. The ones which were most opposed to the current system were the liberal arts and science colleges with 88 percent of the faculty opposed. percent opposed, but the College of Veterinary Medicine was the lowest with only 45 percent opposed. The colleges of business and agri culture were close with 85 percent and 84 percent opposed, respec tively. Some of the ones least opposed were the colleges of engineering and education with 65 percent and 63 Bond said he was opposed to the current policy because it requires fa culty to evaluate students in the same class with different standards. He said he knows many students will say the current policy is a tradi tion that should not be changed, but Bond disagrees. Most of the faculty recognizes the importance of traditions at Texas A&M, Bond said, but they are trying to make a distinction between those traditions which are functional and those which are not. He said the functional ones are those which show “spirit, love and comrnitment-ones which contribute to the making of a great university.” Local • A court order has forced the release of a list of names of those considered for the University’s presidency in 1981. It included some very interesting candidates. See story page 3. • Late registration begins today. For a complete list of important deadlines, see page 12. State • T he American Heart Association has released a study which says 1.5 million Americans will suffer heart attacks this year and an estimated 550,000 of them would die. See story page 5. National • Martin Luther King’s birthday was remembered across the nation Sunday, even though it is not yet a national holiday. See story page 11. d i