Sis a son of I No decision yet on school prayer Midterms available today at Pavilion Ags beat Longhorns in SWC tournament See page 4 See page 13 The Battalion Serving the University community en Nb\l^V\o. WO QSPS 0453A\0 \4 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 7, 1984 mdei Hart does it again t*si d [ United Press International len. Gary Hart buried Walter tpmiale in a landslide in Vermont's ion-binding primary Tuesday, grab- iing bis thiru straight victory in the laitle for the Democratic presi- lemial nomination. ■"he race wasn't even close as I lart ;oi about 70 percent of the vote. Suing on the heels of last Tues- fl’s upset in the New Hampshire ■nary and his victory Sunday in hg Maine caucuses, Hart became the andidate to beat. I With 65 percent of the 204 pre- :iikts reporting. Hart had 25,295 oti s or /1 percent, Mondale 6,940 )i 19 percent and Jesse Jackson or 9 percent. Campaigning in Florida, Hart ■ed that in Vermont a lot of Re- pblicans apparently crossed over to tor for him and he said that meant he could beat Ronald Reagan in No vember. “I believe the result in Vermont shows this campaign does have a chance to reach out beyond the Dem ocratic Party to expand the frontiers of our party and to expand the elec toral base of our party,” Hart said. "I intend to defeat Ronald Reagan.” Mondale still led in the battle for delegates to the Democratic National Convention. He had 132 to 29 for Hart. Many of Mondale’s delegates were House members picked earlier this year to go to the convention and they could change their pledges. Shrugging off the defeat, Mondale told a wildly cheering rally in Tampa, that he is in the presidential race to stay, saying, “I am what I am. What you see is what you get. “This is not a horse race. This has become a battle for the soul of the Democratic party and the future of our nation. “1 will stay in this race to the Finish because of principle and not because of pollsters,” he shouted. Mondale dismissed the Vermont results, telling reporters: “We were not really contesting Vermont. No delegates were being selected in the contest.” Hart’s stunning Vermont victory — his most impressive to date — gave the Colorado Senator a clean sweep in northern New England over the past eight days. Indicative of Hart’s lopsided vote was his 3 to 1 margin in the first re sults from three wards in Burlington, which was expected to be a pocket of strength for Mondale. Hart was favored to score another victory Saturday in Wyoming, a friendly western state adjacent to his home state of Colorado. That would mean he would be building on a string of four consec utive wins going into Super Tuesday — March 13 when 11 jurisdictions hold primaries and caucuses to pick 511 delegates. There was already indication that Hart’s building momentum and Mondale’s failure to win anywhere since the season opening Iowa cau cuses was having a strong effect on the upcoming events. A Boston Globe poll earlier this week showed Hart coming out of nowhere to lead Mondale in Massachusetts, a Super Tuesday state. And in another, Florida, a Miami Herald poll Tuesday showed Hart moving up fast and Mondale sinking. Similar results were reported in Ala bama, although no polls had been re leased. ml Rican, Controversial item deleted from new appointment letter is lhc * By MICHELLE POWE Staff Writer him ®A dispute over a revised version of ■xas A&M’s annual faculty ap- BntmeiU letter was temporarily re solved Monday when the vice presi dent for academic affairs, Gordon F. Eaton, agreed to strike a controver- Bl item from the letter. iy bladBfhe controversial item — Item 3 ouldn’ of the annual appointment letter — j j n m States what percentage of each fac- thougl member’s salary will be drawn sl0 p from state leaching money and how the due W c h from other sources, such as re- ( j ^ey search grants. The item also states thai the University is only obligated to pay for the teaching part of each faculty member’s salary. a hen! py, in as the as like tim. igii] ;pel >d The revised letter was the subject of much debate in the Faculty Senate meeting last month, the result of which was a letter of protest sent to Eaton by the Faculty Senate asking that the item be striken from the let ter. Many senators expressed concern, both last month and Monday, that Item 3 could jeopardize the salaries and tenure of faculty members. Seve ral senators expressed concern that if any research grants fell through, some faculty members could be left without a large part of their income. Others worried that some depart ment heads or deans might “punish” a tenured faculty member, or an un tenured faculty member awaiting tenure, by manipulating assignments between the University and state agencies. The senators charged that a department head might allocate part of a faculty member’s salary to research funds, knowing that no such funds were available. Eaton said, however, that the ap peals process guarantees against such action. He said a faculty member can take a case to University President Frank E. Vandiver and to the Ten ure Advisory Committee. Eaton said the deletion of Item 3 won’t change anything. He said Item 3, although a new addition to some colleges’ appointment letters, is not a new policy. The University administration, at the beginning of each academic year, distributes all teaching funds appro priated to it by the Legislature to the various colleges. State law, he said, prohibits all State institutions from committing funds it does not have. State law also prohibits converting teaching funds for other purposes, he said. He said the University still won’t be obligated for “more than the sup port from teaching funds indicated,” as stated in the appointment letter. Eaton said some of the appoint ment letters already have sent out but can be corrected. The Senate’s resolution requesting the deletion of Item 3 applies to the 1984-1985 academic year. But the Senate called for a study of faculty appointment letters in the future. Photo by JOHN RYAN Future Aggie All-American Two-year-old Justin Wayne Sherrill receives some advice on the finer points of basketball during half-time at the Texas A&M-University of Texas game from his father Jackie Sher rill, head football coach and athletic director here. fhe ‘Battle of Twin Cities’ is only beginning By ED ALANIS Staff Writer nternali® Arkansj t ot iltf J It’s two dogs fighting over the d^lme bone, but that bone is growth n 1s " and business, and the meat on the bone is the almighty dollar. > have'll Jhe two dogs, Bryan and College seasof Station. it moi 11 ® Good or bad, the good of days are t to S over for Bryan. This sleepy railroad y nigk town has been thrust into the sophis- V nw ticated realm of industry and big ts tin 5 business, and it’s up to its ears in a clear predicament few towns ever face, hadp College Station has grown to meet menl Bryan at its city limits, and is chal- bosta 1 jenging Bryan for every new business west or industry coming to the Brazos gaflt £ Valley. ,e first ! Tie bottom line — which city gets ar Inst the generated tax revenues? home ■ College Station became a town in nst i one tart tli f 1938, after growth around the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College justified the incorporation of a city. If only Bryan had been able to fore see the potential growth of that small military college across the prairie... Instead, College Station sprang up overnight and stole the biggest thing in the Brazos Valley right out from under Bryan’s nose — Texas A&M University and the steady influx of dollars from students. Of course, Bryan hasn’t been left out in the cold completely. Bryan reaps many bene fits from the University. However, College Station obviously has the up per hand in the game, and more im portant, College Station represents a threat to the healthy growth of Bryan. James Gardner, a Texas A&M professor of urban and regional planning and a former College Sta tion city councilman, describes the twin cities as being plagued by a “ri valry syndrome.” He calls it good-na tured rivalry, though. Good-natured or not, big dollars are at stake. With big money in volved, “good-natured” can only be a temporary description at best. Bryan founders probably never dreamed their city would one day be battling a neighboring city for every thing from a chamber of commerce building to a hi-tech plant, but so it is, and the cities resemble two men deadlocked in an arm wrestling match, beads of sweat forming on the brows of both. A combined Bryan-College Station Chamber of Commerce, formed in the early 1960s to unite the two cities and enable them to combine re sources to achieve common goals, has backfired after twenty years and cre ated a dissension in city politics that will not disappear overnight. It’s a full-blown fight, and someone has to lose. The fight is over where the com bined chamber of commerce will be housed. Since its formation, it has been situated in downtown Bryan, with a branch office in College Sta tion. Now, College Station is no longer satisfied with its small branch office. When one was finally formally proposed, College Station jumped at it. The city council voted to contrib ute $400,000 towards the estimated moving cost of $660,000. The pro posed site had a central location very near the boundary shared between the two cities, but it was in College Station. When put to a vote the proposal was favored by a majority, but not by the required two-thirds majority. A temporary victory for Bryan, at the cost of diminishing unity with Col lege Station. “But there’s more than one way to skin a cat,” College Station Mayor Gary Halter told reporters after the vote was announced. And indeed, College Station has not given up the fight. Another issue to finally surface this year has been the status of medi cal care in the twin cities. The exist ing two hospitals are located side by side, in Bryan. The smaller, Humana Hospital Bryan-College Station, has filed a proposal with the Texas Health Fa cilities Commission to expand and move to a new location in south Col lege Station. The feelings on this issue are mixed. As a city, College Station rec ognizes its need for medical facilities, Halter said. However, the value of size is also recognized. Hospital expansions are granted based on estimated overall community needs. If Humana moves and expands, a lot of growth will have to take place before St. Joseph Hospital will be granted approval for more expansion. Many think that one large hospital with a central loca tion, like St. Joseph, would be of more benefit than two smaller hospi tals. The bottom line is city politics — twin city residents go where their needs can best be served, they don’t necessarily go to one city as opposed to the other because of some sense of loyalty. And where the people go, well, that’s where the dollars go. Women make their mark at A&M By ROBIN BLACK Staff Writer as a * 11-16 them * lit Ate' he wi ||1 li Editors note: This is the first oj a tzuo- ame i ( l P url senes copcirning women, both stu- as JtfBento and faculty, at Texas A&M Uni- 2). wfy/' ournB Although women weren’t officially is to Texas A&M as teachers st the' or students until the late 1960s, they iJhave — quite unofficially — made j c |tib'|their presence known in the past. • have* Wanda Farr, the wife of a profes- tourH' i l Sor a t the University, began teaching thoU# 0 l°gy in 1917 —without the rank of -jg w ai ftrofessor, of course. co* Professor Charles Hutson’s three jg Tuftlaughters completed studies in engi- Le a steering between 1893 and 1903 as -re ™ c °urtesy students.” They were al- Ynure Bowed to attend as a favor to their fa- Suitt-Bher. They did not receive degrees, the I Almost 100 years after its genesis, Texas A&M finally admitted women to the University. Betty Unterberger was hired as a « ull professor of history, with tenure, n 1968. Unterberger, who was the only woman with such rank at Texas Annette Lopez, director of affirmative action at the University, said although a shortage of women in ad ministrative and teaching positions at Texas A&M is a problem, the trend lately has been to hire more women. . hoin ( Beatf Have —tey ha* ng no ■louie ■ent). A&M then, said she was treated very well by her co-workers. “I don’t feel any sense of having been discriminated against — then or now — as far as my scholarship is concerned,” she said. Things were a little uncomfortable at first, though, she said. “It was kind of like being a black in a white society,” she said. “I was their ‘token woman’, but there was really no vindictive treatment. I think the other men just weren’t sure how to behave; they had never worked with a woman before.” Unterberger said she wasn’t really surprised by this, since she had worked in a similar atmosphere at three other universities before com ing to Texas A&M. Women professors were rare until well into the 1970s, she said, so she learned to “pretty much be a loner.” More women have been hired in teaching and administrative posi tions, but, she said, she doesn’t see many promising indications that the balance of men and women in faculty positions will ever be what it should. “There has been such a long standing tradition against it (hiring of women in high positions) at A&M,” she said. “It’s just really hard to overcome.” Annette Lopez, director of affir mative action at the University, said although a shortage of women in ad ministrative and teaching positions at Texas A&M is a problem, the trend lately has been to hire more women. “We’re still at an extreme shorta ge,” she said, “but starting from nothing and going to something is an improvement.” The Texas Plan, which provides that the University must hire a cer tain number of minorities in admin istrative positions within the next four years, does not include women as a minority. “Women are technically not a mi nority, because they make up about half of the work force,” Unterberger said, “but realistically we are a mi nority where professional positions are concerned.” In a report compiled last Septem ber by the department of Institutio nal Analysis, out of the 1574 faculty members (which includes full, assis tant and associate professors) at Texas A&M, about 13 percent or 108 of those are women, and 43, or less than half, of the women have tenure. Of the remaining 1466 male fac ulty members, 965, or about 66 per cent, of them are tenured. mm Local • Corps’ dining routines won’t change despite higher costs of Duncan’s family-style dining. See story page 3. • The Aggieland Inn is opening a dinner theater. See story page 5. • TAMU parking permit fees may double next semes ter along with an increase in dormitory rates. See story page?. State • Corpus Christi businesses held a mock funeral and burial for one of the Cabbage Patch Kids in a protest Tues day. See story page 11. • Three children who befriended convicted killer James Autry have asked Gov. Mark White to spare him from execution. See story page 11.