State election official hands in resignation - See page 3 Venezuelan plane hijackers killed See page 3 American gymnasts win Olympic gold See page 7 Te x asA &M V • The Battalion Vol 79 No. 178 USPS 045360 8 pages Serving the University community College Station, Texas Wednesday, August 1,1984 12 A&M women ait for housing EVE THOM! for a pb »se iad e temational as joined s and shai lia had hii uringanoi v separatei alea Mondi of Burma, ;ans, werei ?r surgicali uion compli lause from"* :k Children, was "quite nergenq hours afa edingfousj ere geneia .:eivea thenl tion, whik'j are to give na for Wini ;onads so reaugh mastj bert Filler,) By KARI FLUEGEL Staff Writer I For the first time in several years. Itlie housing office has gone through Itlie original fall waiting list for men’s dorms, but 412 women are still wait ing to get a space, Tom Murray, ousing services supervisor, said. I Lower apartment rates, rising dorm costs and rumors about the ^difficulty of getting into a dormitory may have contributed to fewer stu dents seeking a dormitory space thus treating a shorter wailing list, i Fewer students participated in the housing lottery this year. For the 1983-84 school year, 2,400 women ami 2,300 men participated in the housing lottery. In this year’s lottery, 2,215 women and 1,760 men partici pated. I The drop in the number of stu dents participating in the housing lottery may be accounted for in tfie Combination of the affordability of off-campus housing rates and rises dormitory rates, Murray said, i Students also are not applying for housing as early, he said. To partici pate in the fall lottery, students must apply and pay their $200 deposit be- iween Nov. .1 and Dec. 15, ten months before school begins. I "A lot of students are not ready to ommit to a university yet,” Murray aid. J While the $200 deposit may dis courage some students from apply ing for housing, it has increased the number of students meeting dead lines to cancel housing reservations. ■ “The earlier we know, the better,” Murray said. I Since the July 2 report, more stu dents have applied for housing cre- ting a new fall waiting list. The Texas A&M residence halls ave spaces for 9,781 students — ,487 for civilian students and 2,294 orps members. After the fall sign up by returning civilian students, there were 1,062 spaces open for omen and 719 for men. In 1983-84, there was a small in- rease in the number of students moving off-campus after living in the dormitories. While the number of women moving of stayed about the same, the number of men mov ing off campus increased. “That’s a trend we’re concerned about,” Murray said. To combat the problem, the housing office has been implementing programs to make on-campus living more desira ble. Such programs include renovat ing and updating the residence halls, Murray said. This year the housing office has overassigned 340 students. Fifty-two students will be housed in study car- rells in Mosher and Aston Halls, the rest will be assigned to triples. Overassigning students is not a miscalculation or an accident made by the housing office, Murray said. Overassignments are based on statis tics of the past year. Overassigning students assures there will be stu dents ready and available to fill places not claimed by the first class day. Dormitories will officially open Aug. 20 at 10 a.m. Summer resi dence halls will close at 6 p.m. Aug. 17. Students living on-campus for summer school will be allowed to check into their fall assignment the afternoon and evening of Aug. 17. Students must have a paid fee rec eipt to check into their hall. In the past, the housing office used the week between the summer session and fall semester to clean summer residence halls and train staff. “We won’t have that luxury this year,” Murray said. This year, the summer session will end two days before fall check in be gins leaving the housing office to close and open dormitories simulta neously, Murray said. With no break, housing office personnel will not be able to clean and check rooms and also will not be able to inform staff members about procedures. Photo by JAIME LOPEZ Closing the door on Spence Street Rick Tucker, left, and Frank Tucker put up a fence across Spence Street at the intersection of Ross Street and Spence Street. The intersection is not closed, but a short section of Spence Street from the Ross Street intersection south has been closed because of construction of the new Chemistry Building. A&M plans west campus growth ioth girls,"ig e more agj hologic ite one toK > have exfj It lid. 1 be belief f a paraplf; lave exce' excellent f have il in Ran) a third, ] 1 male genii* urinary By SARAH OATES Staff Writer he Texas A&M University campus will someday include a major re search park and may extend all the way out to FM 2818, thanks to an ambitious expansion plan, said a 'University vice-chancellor. Gen. Wesley Peel, vice-chancellor lof facilities and planning, recently •discussed the West Campus Master Expansion plan. “We can only expand west be cause there’s nowhere else to go,” he said. “Texas A&M owns all that land. “The idea is for big companies, such as Shell, to lease the land from the University and build pure re search buildings here.” The plan includes construction of a Research Park, a new Systems Ad ministration Building, a new Physi cal Plant and a Track and Field Events Center with adjacent intra mural fields. The Research Park will be built behind what is now West Campus, bound by Jersey Street, FM 60 and FM 2818. Construction work for the Park, to include an Ocean Drilling Program Building worth $4.8 mil lion, will be contracted this Septem ber. The Park will cost an estimated $7 million. Peel said the Park will be com pletely devoted to research, not aca demics, although it is probable that students and University faculty will be employed there. Early plans place the new Poultry Science Center at the corner of West Campus bound by FM 2818, near the Sewage Treatment Plant. There also are tentative plans for a Track and Field Events Center, which would be located at the corner of Beef Cattle Road and Jersey Street. The Center would be funded by donations. A new Systems Administration See EXPANSION, page 4 Problems face all graduate students ephone 0^' Foreign TA’s fight status, not culture ssified By REBECCA DIMEO Reporter j (Editor’s note: This is the second in a three-part series about foreign | graduate students who teach.) Almost one-sixth of Texas A&M | graduate students are foreign. Nearly one-third of the university- | supported graduate students — I those on teaching and research I assistantships or fellowships — are [ foreign. One, Pablo Gottret, 24, is a doc toral candidate in economics from Bolivia. He taught Economics 203, Principles of Economics, Spring 1983. He is teaching it the second summer session and is scheduled to teach it again in the fall. He says his difficulties with teaching are not a problem of culture but one of status. “I think the problems I have with teaching are shared with American graduate students,” Gottret says. Be cause students are skeptical of all graduate teaching assistants, he says, TA’s must work to prove compe tence in the subject before students take them seriously. As an interna tional student, he has an extra prob lem. “When you speak with an accent students say, ‘Maybe this guy knows what he’s teaching, but I don’t know if I’ll be able to understand what he says,”’ Gottret says. Although Gottret has an accent, after six years he no longer has any trouble speaking or understanding English. He says the language differ ences don’t interfere with his teach ing ability, especially since he learned economics in English and is only now studying the Spanish equivalents of economic terms. “Being a foreigner brings a lot to your teaching ability,” he says. “When I’m teaching economics and talking about the United States defi cit or economic development. I’m able to compare it with that of third world countries.” Being able to bring personal expe riences from abroad to the class room means something to Gottret, who, in addition to his childhood in Bolivia, as a youth spent a year and a half in Paris with his aunt and uncle. “You don’t go to a foreign country just to go to school,” he says. “You go to live the culture. I don’t think peo ple can become bicultural, but they should be able to understand, share and enjoy another culture.” Gottret, who received his bache lor’s degree in economics at Texas A&M, says he’s well adjusted to life in College Station. Although he’s met a few rude students, he doesn’t feel he’s been discriminated against. “I don’t think they’re disrespect ful because I’m a foreigner or I’m not a professor,” he says. “I think they’re disrespectful because they don’t like the material.” Another foreign graduate student with the same ideas is Chung-Ping (Peter) Chung, a doctoral candidate in electrical engineering from Tai wan. More foreign students at Texas A&M are from Taiwan than any other country. Chung, 29, plans to graduate in Jet hijackers turn to Beirut United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — Three Arabic-speaking hijackers Tuesday seized an Air France jetliner with 64 people aboard, apparently killing a hostage and forcing the terrified pi lot to fly to Beirut after a refueling stop in Geneva. “Just do what they want,” the pilot told local government official Robert Ducret. “There has already been one death and if you do not hurry there will be more.” The Air France Boeing 737 was en route from Frankfurt, West Ger many, to Paris with 64 people aboard when the hijackers, appar ently armed with grenades, forced it down for refueling at Geneva’s Cointrin airportjust after 6 p.m. It was the second airliner hijack ing this week, beginning just hours after Venezuelan commandos stormed an aircraft on the Carib bean island of Curacao and killed two men who had threatened to blow up a plane and 79 hostages. Swiss airport and police spokesmen said there were three hi jackers aboard the Air France plane, which took off at 7:37 p.m for Bei rut. Lebanese officials said the plane would be denied permission to land and the airport would be closed if necessary. Ducret said he was told there had been gunfire in the cabin of the air liner and asked the pilot if he needed help. “No, no,” Ducret said the fright ened pilot replied. “They are very threatening. Just refuel the aircraft and let us take off. You do not real ize the situation we are in.” Swiss police said, however, they could not be sure anyone was dead. The hijackers may have forced the pilot to report the killing in order to place additional pressure on airport authorities, they said. The hijackers first demanded to go to Tehran, Iran, when the air craft landed at Geneva with its 58 passengers and six crew — a pilot, copilot and four stewardesses. Iran said it would refuse them permission to land, however, and the hijackers decided to go to Beirut instead. Police spokesman Jean-Claude Ducrot said the air pirates claimed in radio conversations with airport offi cials to be armed with grenades. “The three men speak Arabic and also speak some English although with a heavy accent,” he said. Soviet missiles to counter U.S.’s United Press International MOSCOW — The Soviet Union Tuesday said it was testing long- range cruise missiles to counter the American nuclear missile program and warned the United States it would be “naive to assume” they would not be deployed. “Cruise missiles are something that cut both ways,” an editorial in the Communist Party newspaper Pravda warned. “It is naive to as sume that their massive deployment will remain unanswered.” Moscow walked out of the talks in Geneva on strategic and medium range nuclear missies last year to protest the NATO deployment of a new generation of U.S. Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Western Eu rope. The missiles were deployed to counter previously installed Soviet SS-20 missiles. Pravda said the cruise missile pro gram of the United States was the latest in a series of unsuccessful at tempts to gain military superiority over the Soviet Union. “They are heading for a washout this time too,” Pravda said. “Since the United States lias refused to re nounce the new type of weapons, long-range cruise missiles are al ready being tested in the U.S.S.R. as well.” Because of its superiority in com puter technology, the United States is generally believed to have a lead of several years in development of cruise missiles. However, the U.S. Defense De partment survey of Soviet forces this year said Moscow was developing five long-range cruise missile sys tems with ranges estimated at 1,800 miles. American cruise missiles, some already deployed in Europe, have a range of 1,500 miles. The Soviet cruise missiles would be fitted with nuclear warheads ini tially but could eventually carry con ventional warheads if improvements are made in their accuracy. The Kremlin has said the Septem ber talks in Vienna are “impossible” because the United States insists on broadening the talks on space weap ons to include discussions on limit ing long-range and medium-range missiles. In Today’s Battalion August. Although he originally had a tough lime adapting to classes in English, after five years he speaks it slowly but effectively. “If they really don’t understand me,” he says of his engineering lab students, “it’s because they don’t un derstand the content of the subject — so if they’re lost, I know why they’re lost.” Chung came with his wife to Texas A&M for graduate work after one semester at the University of De troit. He came because his brother, a professor of chemistry at the Uni versity of Taiwan, sent Chung favor able reports from his former Texas A&M students who had returned to Taiwan. “I guess if one department is good, the others aren’t too bad,” Chung says with a grin. Chung says his subject matter, en gineering, may be easier to teach as a foreign student than some others be- See GRADUATE STUDENTS, page 6 Local • For the first time in a year, a Texas A&M Emergency Medical Services paramedic was allowed to start an IV. See story page 3. State • A Houston girl has contracted rabies, and is in a coma. See story page 5. National • Mondale and Ferraro open their campaign tour to gether at a rally in New York. See story page 5.