ligh Court rules against isex discrimination Gandhi, others, urge halt to arms race See page 6 See page 4 Consumer prices rose 0.5 percent in April See page s The Battalion L- Serving the University, community m 79 No. 152 USPS 0453110 6 Pages leagan College Station, Texas Wednesday, May 23, 1984 psks for support United Press International WASHINGTON — President ■an said Tuesday the “enemies of oin” are watching congressional Hte over aid to El Salvador, and ^lled on the lawmakers to pro- nough support to do the job. “ll the Congress offers too little jort, it would be worse than jmy, nothing at all,” Reagan said as ^^^■pened his 24lh nationally tele- I ll l )ress conference. f |lu Reagan plea came as Salvado- ^^|President-elect Jose Napoleon finie lobbied Congress for $62 mii- fTRjj ( | n| n emergency military aid for his u|try. Bur Congress faces some historic ie onl\§|' ons t h' s week,” Reagan said. ■nt A • % e must support the democratic ‘ piraiions of the people of Nicara- !Ct, f°|. Hand oppose the Sandinista ag nomen Issors against their neighbors,” he Bd. “Peace can only be achieved Sentral America if the forces of icracy are strong. Duarte Tuesday made the rounds d Kapitol Hill, apparently making ■way in securing aid. House Speaker Thomas O’Neill id lhat although he opposes fur- S Bmililary aid for El Salvador, he ||mpressed by Duarte’s “courage, Bsty and decency” and he pre- led the House will approve both Bier military and economic aid are hai!*?' 111 Salvador. j l0 ^ 11 ie House is expected to act later ibjeclloB^k on Reagan’s request for the her _ 12 million in military aid, which Diier tlil^ ^ )e added on lop of $64.8 mil- re b’ U | )i| that Congress earlier approved ""the grrlP 1 * 5 fiscal year. niinenlB a S an refused to say what the , pl a yei nited States will do in the Persian urse. B ^ l ^ e Iran-Iraq war worsens, Khesaid he does not think Ameri- nen IxJf become involved in a shoot- ue. B var - -stioinjl fiank it’s very slight,” he said of efcossibility of U.S. troops becom- lopof g involved. “I can’t forsee that hap- 0 (,i s Bug. As things stand now, no I l dowi P 1 think so.” - to inaiH ea g an said that despite U.S.-So- Btensions, he thinks the world is Ijpg. fernow than it has been. “1 don’t think we’re any closer or was [lJ°se as we might have been in the B... to a nuclear conflagration,” he B “Yes, the Soviet Union is un- lp))v.... We’re building up our mili- 'oudid fy and we’re not unilaterally dis- »utit.’’ Bing while they continue their d botltesive buildup. I think the world op thtBbe is a little safer than it has been line past.” antes 1 Reagan also said: -olilion • He is not worried about the in- $250.’eased presence of Soviet subma- e dropffts off the U.S. coast. “If I thought re. B e was some reason to be con- Bed about them I wouldn’t be ping in this house tonight,” he |. “This isn’t anything new.” He said the Soviets apparently re doing “something in return” |NATO deployment of interme- ate-range missiles in Europe. Photo J Nice weather Taking advantage of the calm after the storm, this bicyclist rides through the debris knocked from the trees by rain, hail and high winds Monday. Sidewalks, such as this one in front of Leggett Hall, were covered with leaves and branches. Please see related story this page. Regents approve runway plan By ROBIN BLACK Senior Staff Writer The Texas A&M Board of Re gents Tuesday approved plans to ex tend one of the runways at Eas- terwood Airport and build additional prestige boxes at Kyle Field. The plans tor the airport would lengthen the runway to 7,000 feet and would ^allow larger planes to come and go from the airport. Pre sent facilities at the airport make it al most impossible for large jets to take off from the too-short runways. The Federal Aviation Administra tion must approve plans for the longer runway, and if they do the federal government will pay 90 per cent of the bulding cost. The FAA has already said it would approve the 90 percent subsidation for a 6,200-foot runway, and the re gents are hoping the agency also will approve funding for the additional, 800 feel. The board has estimated the total cost for the runway extension at $6.4 million. Regents also approved plans to have preliminary designs drawn up for 48 more suites to be built around the horseshoe area in Kyle Field. The complex, which will include facilities to accommodate 1,200 peo ple for meetings and social events, will be funded by donations from the Aggie Club. Although no definite price for the suites has been determined at this time, people have already committed to leasing 22 of the suites. The lease revenues will be the source of funds for the project,.and the overall lease prices will be set higher than actual construction costs. The board also approved the Stu dent Center Complex fee hike that was approved in a student body ref erendum during student elections in March. The fee, which has not increased since 1973, will be raised from the current rate of $10 to $20 over the next three years. The fee will be raised to $14 a se mester during the 1984-85 school year, then to $18 during the 1985-86 school year and will level off at $20 a semester during the 1986-87 school year. The fee increase was originally au thorized by the State Legislature in 1983, with the stipulations that it in crease to no more than $20 per se mester and that the increase must be approved by a vote of the student body. The student referendum recom mends that a portion of the fee in crease collected be set aside in a sepa rate reserve fund to provide for planning and construction of addi tions to existing facilities to increase space available for general student usage. In other business, the board heard a presentation of the goals of the to tal engineering program at Texas A&M as provided for under the Tar get 2000 project. In the presentation, it was pointed out that the University ranks fourth in the nation in the number of Na tional Merit Scholars it has enrolled, and more than half of those at Texas A&M are enrolled in the College of Engineering. The schools ranking above Texas A&M in the race for brains are Har vard, Princeton and the University of Texas. In the recruiting war to acquire the scholars, Texas A&M claims a total of 545 National Merit Scholars, while ri val UT has 541 National Merit schol ars on its rolls. The run to recruit the high school scholars is fast rivaling the recruiting war for high school athletes, and is equally expensive for institutions. Texas A&M is ahead of UT in one other respect — it has more money to offer the scholars. Every year the University offers between 70 and 90 four-year, $10,000 scholarships to outstanding freshmen. Other scholarships rang ing in value from $750 to $2,000 per school year are available to about 180 other students. UT spends about $150,000 each year to bring 1,200 outstanding stu dents to Austin for a three-day visit to the campus during the summer. That does not include the minimum $1,000 scholarship offered to each student invited. Rains flood area By Kari Fluegel Staff Writer Bryan-CoIIege Station residents got more than they hoped for in the recent torrential storms, and more showers may fall today, but the Na tional Weather Service is predicting a clear weekend. Thunderstorms that swept through the area Monday, dumping up to three inches of rain in several parts of Brazos County, caused some minor damage and flooding on cam pus and in the area. Golf-ball-sized hail was reported in some areas. Lightning struck a unit of South- side Apartments, the married stu dents’ apartments, on the Texas A&M campus. The lightning hit the roof over apartments 7-C and 7-D leaving a hole about a foot in diameter and a small amount of smoke damage in side, Elmer Schneider, Texas A&M chief of police, said. The apartment residents were not home at the time. The only other incidents on cam pus were false fire alarms set off by the weather and flooding on Lamar Street and near the Grove, Schneider said. The flooding cleared when the downpour stopped, he said. In College Station, traffic lights at the intersections of University Drive at Texas Avenue and University at College Avenue went down for a short time due to the lightning activ ity in the area. “The electronic equipment in sus-_ ceptible to energy from a lightning burst,” John Black, College Station traffic engineer, said. “The lightning doesn’t have to strike the equip ment.” Also in College Station, police dis patchers had to use flashlights in their work areas and manually check for incoming calls when the outage caused the switchboard to go dark during a 20-minute power outage at the Police Department. In Bryan, lightning caused two feeders at a sub-station to go out and struck at tree at 901 Ruskin Drive leaving smoke damage inside the house. There were no injuries result ing from the incident. The heavy rains caused flooding in the Wheeler Ridge area when cars driving by sent water into the living rooms of houses on Green Valley Road. Bryan city officials expect pot holes to develop because of the heavy water flow on the streets. Also, bro ken branches will have to be cleaned out of the sewers. College Station City Engineer Da vid Pullen said the storms won,’l cause any delay in the road repair work on Southwest Parkway and FM 2818. ritain expells Soviet diplomat United Press International EONDON — The British govern- em announced Tuesday it had ex- Beci a lop Soviet diplomat who re- pnedly was the KGB’s London ation chief in the latest of six recent portations of alleged East bloc tefrom Britain and Belgium. In Moscow, the Kremlin retaliated ■London’s action by ordering the pulsion of Britain’s top security in in Moscow, the Foreign Office fid. phe Soviet diplomat, Arkadi Cuk,. pBritain after being declared “per- Ki non grata” on May 14, a For- gn Office spokesman said. It was ■immediately clear when he left country. |Guk worked as first secretary at (Soviet Embassy, but he has been described as head of Soviet spy oper ations in Britain. The Foreign Office said the Brit ish Embassy’s first secretary in Mos cow, John Burnett, had been or dered out of the Soviet Union by May 28 in what they called a “totally unjustified” reprisal over Cuk’s case. Burnett was responsible for secu rity in Britain’s Embassy in Moscow. Last week, Burnett gave evidence at a British inquest into the suspicious 1983 death of British banker Dennis Skinner, who was a suspected double agent and had contacts within the KGB. Cuk’s alleged role in the KGB was revealed in the London press during last month’s trial of British security agent Michael Bettany, who was con victed of trying to sell secrets to the Soviets and sentenced to 23 years im prisonment. Cuk. was the first Soviet expelled from Britain this year. Six Soviets were thrown out of the country in 1983. Britain also said it has expelled two Czech diplomats for “activities in compatible with their status as diplo mats” — the usual euphemism for spying. They were named as Bohu- mar Seda, a vice consul, and Jan Mal- asek, a clerk. In Belgium, the government an nounced that a Soviet and two East Germans had been thrown out of the country in recent weeks for spying. A Justice Ministry official said one of the East Germans was a second secretary at the East German Em bassy while the other was an engineer working for a Belgian-East German company identified as Rupert Kraus. Kraus had tried to take pictures of installations at a Belgian army bar racks during an alert exercise, police sources said. He was expelled April 30. The second secretary, who had tried to make contact with NATO of ficials, left the country of his own free will April 27. The Soviet, identified only as La- cheff working for Moscow’s trade mission, was arrested during the weekend and was put aboard an Aer oflot airlines flight for Moscow Tues day with his wife and two children, the Justice Ministry said. Lacheff, along with another un- identifed member of the mission, had approached a national from a neighboring country working at NATO headquarters to obtain classi fied information, the ministry said. In Today’s Battalion Local • The colleges of Geosciences and Engineering are sponsoring special summer programs to aid minority stu dents' See story page 3. • The new “Raiders” movie, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, opens today at area theaters. See story page 6. World • Walter Mondale stepped up pressure Tuesday on ri val Gary Hart for a debate among the Democratic presi dential candidates in New Jersey this weekend — and of fered to hold another one in West Virginia. See story page 3. • The Supreme Court ruled that women cannot be barred from business partnerships on the basis of their sex. See story page 6.