ff 'tart tol rh (:1 'tidn; e gets bent, and seei !. ,lle lj 'g plat also I® ls ( |tiarterbath >g into Mo, ' st - The Im- (1 have the sen hack Tom Rji ’’'gilt’s conies ter Fred Ee ' • Ramsey leaders twot, • 'vith the Los, vailabilitytiB: he Invaderst Absentee voting for May starts today See page 3 Sophomores L-Z must pre-register today Aggie softball pitcher pitches perfect game See page 9 TKe Battalion Serving the University community itli their fir' 1 l the Housto|79No. 133 CJSPS 0453110 12 pages lot hern thatjT I he Ganibletl in the learn College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 17, 1984 ense has I ms this aid. “Hoptlj ing we can i v night." nalds unman jlls U.S. Ifficial United Press International §\N SALVADOR — A gunman j from a taxicab killed the head tcurity at the U.S. Embassy Mon- ■barely a mile from the mission, liorities said. aaquim Alfredo Zapata Romero, Idied in his car from four bullet Inds to the head, neck and chest, Jesses said. His wife Yolanda was 1 in the mouth but a daughter eling with them was unharmed, [said. [fitnesses said the unidentified [man in the passenger seat of a [ pulled up beside Zapata’s car, Iped at a major intersection dur- ig the morning rush hour in the est of the capital, and opened fire. Jjlheysaid the gunman and the taxi p escaped from the scene by ding away to the north. logroup immediately claimed re- hsibiliiy and police said they had i Washington, the State Depart- tsaid it had no information on dentily of the gunman and that med of the shooting “with pro- id regret.” The department of State con ns all such acts of violence and irism,” said department spokes- John Hughes. japata was an 8-year veteran of assy security, the highest-rank- Salvadoran on the embassy staff headed the 200-member security :e of Salvadorans, a spokesman the mission said. le ranked just below the embas- Regional Security Officer, an erican, the spokesman said. mong his duties was coordinat- security arrangements with the adoran government for the visits aigh-ranking American officials, i as Cabinet members and the president, the spokesman said. lapata previously had been chief the Salvadoran national police ninal investigations division, au- dties said. 'ampus construction in full swing Fighting continues in Beirut and Tripoli United Press International BEIRUT — Fighting closed the only crossing between the Christian and Moslem sectors of the divided capital Monday and rival Moslem gunmen clashed in Tripoli, killing at least four people and wounding 20 others. In Damascus, Syrian Vice Presi dent Abdel Halim Khaddam met with Druze Moslem rebel leader Wa lk! Jumblalt and top aides in Jumb- latt’s Progressive Socialist Party in a bid “to consolidate a cease-fire,” Druze radio said. Other rebel leaders opposed to the government of Christian President Amin Gemayel met in Damascus as fighting flared again in Beirut and Tripoli, a port city 42 miles north of the capital. At least six people were reported killed Sunday in Tripoli when the first fighting in the city in months erupted between the Tawheed, a fundamentalist Sunni militia, and the “Pink Knights,” gunmen of the pro- Syrian Alawite sect of Islam that bit terly opposes the Sunnis. Fighting closed the Museum cross ing Monday, halting traffic through the Green Line, a no mans land lepa- rating the Christian east from Mos lem west Beirut. Minutes after police in Beirut opened the crossing for the day, mortar shelling and bursts of heavy machine-gun fire forced them to close it. “There were dozens of cars at the time of the shooting but none was hit,” one witness said. “Drivers left their cars and escaped into nearby buildings when the first shells fell in an empty lot.” A Christian delegate at a cease-fire committee meeting to reopen the crossing blamed Moslem gunners for the violence. The Museum crossing, normally open 12 hours a day, remained shut in what appeared to be its first all-day closing since February. Safely away from the bloodshed aboard a U.S. warship off the Leb anese coast, American professor Frank Regier received medical tests less than 24 hours after he was re leased from two months in captivity. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said Regier, 56, head of the electrical en gineering department at the Ameri can University of Beirut, was flown by helicopter to the USS Nassau. Regier, of Montgomery, W.Va., was reported “in psychologically good condition but physically weak.” Regier and French architect Chris tian Joubert, both kidnapped in west Beirut in February, were rescued Sunday by Shiite Moslem militiamen. Haig, Kissinger to have extra security while here Photo by JOHN MAKELY Too late now More than 40,000 tax returns were processed at the Bryan Post Office Monday night. Charles Ray, manager of mail proc essing in Bryan, postmarks and sorts through a few of the re turns. The mail trucks left for the Austin post offices at 1 a.m. Tuesday morning. By ROBIN BLACK Staff Writer Former Secretaries of State Alex ander Haig and Henry Kissinger will be the Big Men on Campus Thurs day, and with the security measures that are being taken it shouldn’t be too difficult to pick them out of the crowd. Bob Wiatt, director of Security and Traffic of the University Police, said the department is preparing for the worst and stepping up security for the event Thursday. There will be a “very visible show of support” by the University Police while the two men are here, Wiatt said, because there is no way of knowing who else might show up as a welcoming committee. “There will be a tremendous amount of security from the moment they land at the airport,” he said. Wiatt said University Police will check out in advance every place Haig and Kissinger will be while on campus. The University Police have issued a parade permit to LaRouche, an or ganization that is a right-wing branch of the Democratic party. Wiatt said the group will be allowed to demon strate only within the constraints of the Rudder Fountain area. Larouche has distributed propa ganda pamphlets accusing Kissinger of being behind the plot to murder former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro. Kissinger will bring two body guards with him but Haig will arrive alone, Wiatt said. “We’re not treating this thing lightly,” he said. “This is a heck of a lot more than ‘ho-hum, there’s an other speaker on campus.’ This could end up with several people screaming and hollering.” Keri Hairston, public relations di rector of the Endowed Lecture Series which is sponsoring the Haig-Kissin- ger event, said she’s not anticipating much trouble at Texas A&M because of the strong conservatism in the stu dent body. “The only thing any kind of dem onstration can do is help us in the fu ture,” Hairston said. “It would help because more of the media would be attracted next year.” Kissinger encountered a consider able amount of protest last month when he spoke at the University of Texas. More than 200 people held a peaceful demonstration around UT’s LBJ library in protest of Kissinger’s El Salvador involvement, and about 50 were arrested. “You never know who else might show up,” he said. “The people from UT might show up about the El Sal vador thing. After all, Austin is only about 90 miles from here.” Capt. M. Newton of the College Station Police Department said city police will not be involved with the security, but will be on call if the Uni versity police need assistance. Wiatt said that University Police might have a paddy wagon nearby in case any trouble starts with demon strators. “We might even have a school bus depending on the numbers,” he said. Tickets for the Endowed Lecture Series sold out last week, so the com mittee has arranged for a video sim ulcast in Rudder Theater. Tickets for the simulcast are on sale in the Rud der box office. University trying to solve building shortage ITS each Moi’ staurants 3 ' as Avenu 3 ' iff, graph 103 By ANNE HEDGCOXE Reporter Texas A&M University just uldn’t be the same without con- tction fences, renovation signs, Uming drills and banging ham- rs. Respite the leveling off of student ollment in the past few semesters, University is building in full gear. Texas A&M has the most severe ilding shortage of any other state iversity, says retired Major Gen ii Wesley E. Peel, vice chancellor facilities planning and construc- n. The University has the physical fa des to accommodate comfortably 25,000 students, he says, but the problem is there are 36,000. According to the coordinating board’s standard of 130 square feet per one full-time student, Peel says the University is probably about one million square feet short of ENG, general education space. About ten years ago, Texas A&M was just trying to keep up with the rapid increase in student enrollment. Now that enrollment has slacked off, the University can “catch its breath”, says Peel. “If the enrollment remains at about 36,000, we will probably catch up, based upon our current pro gram, in about five years,” he says. “At that time, we will be transitioning into a full-time renovation.” Considering the sudden increased enrollment experienced in the last decade, Peel says the University has responded with efficiency. While some universities may as sign classrooms on a departmental basis, Texas A&M uses computers to assure that laboratories and class rooms are fully utilized 1 instead of sit ting dormant. A majority of the classrooms on campus are used approximately six hours a day. Texas A&M also has the space and funds to create the state of the art changes needed for research and in struction. Currently there is $50 million un der contract for building and renova tion, says Peel. “If you look at the projects in pro gress now, there is more renovation under way than in the past,” he says. In the next few years, Peel says there will be $50 million to $60 mil lion under construction at one given time. All this money comes from the Available Fund, income from the Permanent University Fund, a land endowment'totaling $1.5 billion, and bonds sold by the University. “Some complain about all the brick arking permits to be sold by the year By ERIN PYLE Reporter Students pre-registering for the ring semester have been surprised len signing up for parking stickers they are no longer sold by the se tter. Beginning next fall, all stu ntparking stickers will be sold on a o-semester basis. Stickers pre- >usly have been available on a sin- i-semester basis. AUniveristy Police representative id the selling of the longer permits Hcutthe amount of paperwork in ked. Fees for parking also will go up in e fall. The increased fees will pro vide more money for improved park ing facilities. Students who plan to graduate in December must purchase a sticker for the entire academic year, but at the end of the fall semester they can get a refund for the spring semester if they remove the sticker and return it to the University Police. The sticker does not have to be in one piece to get a refund, but students are required to return all the pieces to the University Police. Graduating students must pay all outstanding tickets before receiving their refund. The new change has caused confu sion among students and the Univer sity Police. Because the pre-registra tion forms have an option for one- semester stickers, some students be lieve they can purchase a one-semes ter sticker. The University Police say they are sorry for the confusion, but all students signing up for parking stickers will be billed for two semes ters. Students who are planning to at tend school both semesters say they are not affected as much as those who are graduating in December. Lee Holmes, a junior political sci ence major from Clear Lake, said he is not opposed to buying the sticker on a yearly basis as long as it is cost- effective. Cynthia Richardson, a sophomore elementary education major from Houston, said the sticker policy is un fair to graduating seniors. Mintarso Salim, an industrial engi neering graduate student from Indo nesia, said he doesn’t mind paying for an extra semester as long as he can get a refund when he graduates. “I guess we don’t have a choice,” Salim said. and mortar. What they forget is that without brick and mortar, there are no offices, laboratories or class rooms,” Peel says. “It is a require ment for construction.” Expansion also is a requirement for upgrading facilities and techno logical research if Texas A&M is going to advance educationally. Texas A&M, like most universities, is experiencing a change in educatio nal scope. Instead of a classroom- based education, more emphasis now is being placed on highly technologi cal research. This is why buildings currently un der construction are mainly office space and research laboratories. Daniel T. Whitt, assistant director of facilities planning and construc tion, says that “In the past decade the rapid growth in enrollment and in research as been such that we have devoted most of our available dollars to new buildings. “We are approaching a point now, however, where we can spend some of those dollars on some very needed renovations. If you have a building that is structurally sound, it is more efficient to renovate than to start over with new construction.” Renovation upgrades and mod ernizes existing facilities while main taining the flavor and character of the University. In Today’s Battalion Local • Participants in Wednesday’s Political Awareness Day include members from MADD, the KKK and the Commu nist Party. See story page 3. • Believe it or not, student bookstores enjoy buying and selling used books. See story page 4. • For a complete list of winners of the Buck Weirus Spirit Awards and the Gathright Awards see page 3.