Rangers lose to Blue Jays See page 13 I Commencement times and speakers See page 9 Dorm move-out made easier See page 3 ■ we bal, nd learnK ihe monei ses focus )r, commiit and sexual the workpl s deal will) s, handily md arm TKe Battalion Serving the University, community beaver? /ol 79 No. 145 USPS 0453110 16 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, May 2, 1984 Photo by KERRI MULLINS Many graduating seniors gather outside Heaton Hall early Wednesday morning to see if the ‘dreaded red dot’ is by their name. Debate quiet as Democrats gear for Texas ught cusiJ ^■his weekend about 3,300 slu- 'e Moris etus will graduate from Texas lote, ruli . &M- trides tk;w> other words, 3,300 students will i beUeriijB tlieir diplomas, 3,300 students the race Jll have their names printed in the tvitabluJgram. 3,300 student’s names fer from Just be pronounced correctly and on thatAh students will shake the hand of Kidenl Frank E. Vandiver. ■or the registrar’s office, the grad- lon weekend is kicked off with the ■ling of the senior clear list. ** a sen * or * s not cleared to grad- lj y noon today, he will not walk |h>ss the stage Friday or Saturday, It Gardner, assistant registrar, t access:: fid ■ concerted effort is made by the ■strar’s office to make sure seniors :s are ex|/|n graduate. in uptheMWe’re in the business of gradua- in TexasS>u,” Gardner said. “Sometimes the compan e gislrar’s office has the reputation ■lephone ffirying not to graduate people, but 'e do everything in the world to gel :d that b> 0,1 oulot here - ipanies lo®^ students only knew how hard le rate I ,e wor ^ lo g et them out, they might tne of ttif'PP rec * ale us more.” ell systeirl^ 0011 today may be the deadline e Texas IF sen ' or clearance, but the week- more foi hd ^ ias OI1 ly begun for the registrar’s ffice staff. Diplomas were ordered earlier in fl year after students applied for jraduation. Once they come back rom the printer, the diplomas are froofed for the correct spellings, de- transplanfets, majors and dates. ) percentI'After they are checked, the diplo- a transptps are rolled and stacked in the Pa- Hunt said ilion until the final list of graduates lleared today. Then the diplomas ic firstb re stacked, in reverse order, onto exas to arts especially built for the diplomas L FlightsM wheeled over to G. Rollie White ■iseum for the commencement nificant fifemonies. or farailfT 0 prevent handing the wrong di- n ts” aiiHma to the wrong student, slu- Ijead dent’s names first are checked before plant ’ihey g° U P lo stage and once ( igain when they get on the stage. SdbJ We give one wrong di- w '..jloina out of the three ceremonies, 810 Gardner said. The commencement programs also are printed after the noon dead line. The final graduation list is taken to the printers to be printed between noon today and the first graduation ceremony Friday. “There is an awful lot of coordina tion and a lot of time and effort put in,” Gardner said. Dr. Bryan Gole, associate dean in the Gollege of Education, and Dr. Rodger Feldman, associate professor of veterinary medicine, will an nounce the names of the 3,300 grad uates. Gole and Feldman get the list of students who have applied for grad uation in March, Cole said. They di vide up the list by colleges and con tact students by phone for pronunciations they are not sure about. “The key is going over it so many times that the entire list is somewhat familiar and making sure there are no suprises,” Cole said. Cole and Feldman get the final list a few hours before graduation. After the students line up for graduation, they find those students whose pro nunciations they are not yet sure of and clarify it again. Cole phonetically spells out names for quick reference during the cere mony, he said. The names are read at a rate of one every four seconds. Vandiver also takes part in the commencement ceremony by pre senting diplomas and shaking hands. “President Vandiver prides him self in shaking everyone’s hand,” Gardner said. Vandiver wears a white golf glove on the hand that he receives the di ploma. “They really pop that diploma in there,” Gardner said. The glove pre vents Vandiver’s hand from getting sore, because with 3,300 diplomas popped into the hand, the hand gets raw, Gardner said. Texas A&M is one of the few ma jor universities that still gives diplo mas at the commencement ceremo nies. Texas A&M is also one of the few universities which only lets peo ple who have actually graduated walk across the stage. “Nobody ever crosses that stage that’s not graduating,” Gardner said. Gardner attributes the 95 percent attendance record to these factors. “We try to treat everyone as an in dividual,” Gardner said. “Each one of those diplomas is unique.” “We would hate to see it change,” Gardner said. “We hope that, even if seniors have to take their final ex ams, we can continue with gradua tion as it is.” United Press International DALLAS —■-The three Democratic presidential candidates Wednesday carefully avoided personal attacks on each other in a debate where they were on the defensive only when questioned sharply by the moderator. Just three days before Texas cau cuses pick the third largest dele gation to the Democratic National Convention, Walter Mondale, Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson for the first lime took no direct attacks on their rivals. They found themselves in agreement on many of the issues — amnesty for illegal immigrants who have been in the country a long Lime, greater recognition of the economic and social needs of the third world, and especially the failures of Presi dent Reagan’s economic program and foreign policy. The debate came as the campaign heads into a crucial period in which Mondale could virutally lock up the nomination, especially if he scores a big win in Texas on Saturday and in Ohio’s primary next Tuesday. With 771 more delegates at stake over the next 10 days, the latest UPI count now shows Mondale has 1,212 of the 1,9(37 delegates needed for nomination, Hart has 644 and Jack- son 209. The candidates seemed pleased with their debate performances, per haps because none faired poorly. Jackson said the debate was “great” and Mondale said: “The debate helps the Democratic Party ... this was en couraging.” The only spark of hostility came when television reporter Sander Vanocer of ABC, the moderator of the League of Women Voters debate, addressed personal questions to each of the candidates. Mondale was grilled on the dele gate committee he ordered dis banded after they had spent thou sands in support of his candidacy, and Hart was asked whey he should be elected when he has not carried a single industrial state — the political backbone of the Democratic Party. But the most heat was put on Jack- son who was quizzed at length on his refusal to repudiate Louis Farrak- han, the black Muslim minister who made death threats against the black reporter who disclosed Jackson had used the term “hymies” to refer to Jews. And on this point Mondale and Hart were quick to jump on their ri val — whose candidacy they have been reluctant to attack in the past. Jackson responded that it was enough that he had disassociated himself with Farrakhan’s statements. He said he embraced Farrakhan as a matter of religious principle of re demption and forgiveness, just as he had embraced Gov. George Wallace of Alabama and former Gov. Orville Faubus of Arkansas, once two of the nation’s most racist public officials. “Moral leadership is known not for purity and perfection, but re demption,” Jackson insisted. “When I reached out for George Wallace and Orville Faubus it was considered growth and maturity ... I will keep bearing whatever scars I must bear to reach out to people.” Mondale and Hart disagreed. “I really thought what Farrakhan said was poison,” Mondale said. “I’m a preacher’s kid and I believe in re demption, but that was going awful far.” Hart said if Farrakhan “threat ened the life of a human being, that’s against the law. I don’t know why the authorities haven’t acted.” e Graduation y 1980 anil nally awar he next* nee Pain Making it work for A&M seniors By KARI FLUEGEL Stall Writer sayi Local congregations worshiping with foreign flair nol By WANDA WINKLER • £\l Reporter BCongregations of the twin cities sing different songs, hear different ernati 0 ii® Ermons > unite in different prayer e "fed follow different religious tradi- — Potions — often vastly different, in a ' (Jl f You’ll find more than white, An- cled al J|p-Saxon Protestants packing the ;alened pews Q f local churches. Hispanics, >lomaU c Koreans an< j Chinese are flocking to countr) local churches to worship in their na- tojeru'tive language and unite with people of their heritage. ^ m0S ’JP anta Teresa Catholic Church in _ ..Jvan sifts about 1,000 Hispanics P, . through its two Spanish masses. But Jewish an | v people attend its one En- olt se ‘glish mass rad cap "\^ e ' re t r yi n g t 0 preserve the His panic flavor,” says the Rev. Tom Frank, Santa Teresa’s pastor, who speaks Spanish fluently. Father Frank’s congregation is ripe for expansion and has grown by 15 families in the past seven months. The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat ter-day Saints in Bryan also has been raking in churchgoers to its Spanish worship service. Planted with a seed of three members, this Latin Ameri can group has sprouted to 45 people in the past year. “People of like backgrounds want to worship together and grow toge ther,” says Kent Hall, president of the Spanish group.” Locally, there’s a growing need to receive the gospel in Spanish, Hall said. So, the Mormans are reaching out, ministering to Spanish-speaking people in the area. Hall predicts the religion boom will remain healthy in the twin cities because he says people learn about change and growth through religion. There’s a chunk of Latin America alive in Bryan, but you’ll find more than just a taste of old Mexico at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in College Station. About 170 Latin American Catho lics head for St. Mary’s on Saturday evenings for a special Spanish mass. The majority of these Spanish-speak ing people are students at Texas A&M and members of the Latin American Catholic Student Associa tion, a religious support group at St. Mary’s. Like a pinata that flows with candy and other goodies, this Spanish mass spreads its treasures — more mem bers — to the area. The Rev. Leon Strieder, associate pastor of St. Mary’s, began this mass with 30 people in December 1982 and has nurtured it to 180 church goers. Strieder, fluent in Spanish, said he enjoys celebrating the mass in Span ish and mixing with the Latin Ameri can students. Strieder also meets with these students for weekly Spanish Bi ble study. The Spanish heritage is blooming in the twin cities, but local Koreans are on a religious roll, too. The Korean Church of A&M, a non-denominational Christian con gregation, sings, prays and worships in Korean. This church began in 1981 with about 20 Koreans meeting in Rudder Tower, but it quickly popped the top off Rudder. Dr. Kwang Ro, a political science professor who is co-founder of the congregation, said his church focuses on serving the religious needs of Ko rean students at Texas A&M. The church must be meeting those needs — its membership has grown to 100. To cope with this growth surge, the Korean church struck a deal with Calvary Baptist Church in Bryan. Calvary Baptist provides the congre gation with meeting rooms at no cost; in return, the Koreans donate money for utility expenses. Ro said his church growth reflects more than just the growth of Korean students at Texas A&M — 100 to 125 Koreans were Aggies in the past year. This growth also comes from students turning toward religion and desiring spiritual growth because of the times, says Ro, who emigrated from Korea to America in 1955. And Chinese are getting their share of church loo. The Chinese Fellowship, a non-de- nominalional church, meets for Sun day worship at First Baptist Church in College Station. First Baptist pro vides a free meeting place for the 80 worshipers, who are mainly Chinese students at Texas A&M. Although these nationalities have their own special alphabet, each acts like a magnet that attracts and bonds people in a common goal — to worship God and support their neighbors down a religious path of life. inances By MELISSA ADAIR Assistant City Editor Editor’s note: This is the second of a lo-part series on international students IiouY ; al Texas A&M. | ; Last year the money stopped com ing for Josue Leos. iced coi'f He was on a scholarship from a the IMtniversity in Mexico to study ento- Telocai ( r ,,0 logy at Texas A&M Univeristy -usalenifUd all of a sudden there was no ppositiffUioie money. His professors tried lo get the scholarship renewed but puldn’t. said S Fortunately, for Leos, his profes- lieavilv Sors offered him a research uniikelfsisumtship so he could finish his -ashingif! 0ctorate - expects to finish some- 1 time this year. I Of the almost 2,200 international i ploniA nd 0# :sl their ; ir en^ jrusak 11 ►residefl 1 is was a of Ej? >e applir hinder international students at Texas A&M, most have enough money to complete their studies in the United States. But be cause of the economic turmoil in some countries, this situation may not continue. Already a few interna tional students have had to leave Texas A&M without a degree after many years of schooling. There was no more money. Internationals from Mexico can testify to this. Tina Watkins, international stu dent adviser at Texas A&M, said that last year about 15 Mexican students had to go back to their country sim ply because they or their parents could no longer afford school. “It’s extremely embarrassing for them to go home without a degree,” Watkins said. Their family and friends are so proud and excited when they leave to study in the United States, she said, and the stu dents feel empty-handed if they go home without a degree. And many of the 160 or so Mexi can students still here are trying frantically to finish their degrees be fore the peso devaluates further. Some Mexican students are taking 22 hours or more so they can finish their degrees before the money situa tion in their country gets any worse, Watkins said. “I’m really in a hurry to get out now,” Leos said. About three years ago 20 Mexican pesos was the equivalent of one U. S. dollar. Now it takes almost 170 pesos to equal one dollar - a 750 percent in crease. students The University estimates that it costs about $10,200 annually for an international to come to Texas A&M for one year - that’s 1.73 million Mexican pesos for just one student, for just one year. And the situation in Bolivia isn’t much better. I vo Luis Lopez, a junior agricultu ral engineer from Bolivia, said he was fortunate that he could come here. He has an aunt in Houston that offered to help him with expenses so he could come to the United States to study. See INTERNATIONAL page 9 In Today’s Battalion Local • Finding a hotel in the area for graduation may be next to impossible this late. See story page 3. ^ Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative polit ical group, forming in time to attend the Republican con vention. See story page 4. State • Democratic party chairman sees possible Hart upset Saturday. See story page 5. • Tornado season’s peak month opens with violent storms. See story page 9.