>rrow f s should lav f their d5 p.ni, ^rs 'sice pro. Jikations ntetrs to inforiiQ. oil Sdj. •w - offered f, tomor- ‘will ses- tification only cost ■mencan f5th annual Bonfire to burn on Thursday Enrollment limited for business college No. 15 Ags ignored by NCAA tournament l lie Battalion Serving the University community Vol. 80 No. 62 USPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 27, 1984 omb explodes near Colombian embassy nkatesh- sical in- concert ig inter- ices , Buddy New Ft- be fiK- United Press International BOGOTA, Colombia — A car omb exploded Monday outside the L.S. Embassy, killing a Colombian Voman and wounding live other people days after a group of U.S. diplomats left Colombia under threats tied to drug traders, wit- pesses and radio reports said. No embassy personnel were hurt |tnd there were no immediate claims ipf responsibility. Initial radio reports said a book *on the conditions of Colombian pris- Ijjtmers in the United States was found in the car. The explosion came about a week after more than 10 U.S. diplomats and their families moved out of the country following threats linked to the government’s decision to extra dite drug smugglers to face charges in the United States. The explosion went off about 3:50 p.m. and was heard at least four blocks away at the Jesuit University. Smoke blackened the sky around the embassy, witnesses said. The car containing the bomb had been parked in front of the embassy for several hours before the explo sion, witnesses said. Radio reports identified the dead woman as Martha Betancur, 45, who apparently was sitting in an outside waiting area to discuss visa require ments with embassy personnel. It was not immediately clear exac tly how the woman, the mother of three children, died. Radio reports said at least five people were wounded. Colombian authorities could not immediately confirm the casualty reports. “As far as we know no one em ployed by the embassy was hurt,” said a spokesman contacted by tele phone inside the building after the explosion. “We heard a loud explo sion. To me it sounded like thun der.” He said the blast prompted em bassy workers to take refuge in pro tected areas of the building known as “safe havens.” They were later al lowed to return to their homes. The spokesman said a joint inves tigation into the attack would proba bly be conducted by embassy secu rity officials and Colombian police. Initial news reports said three se curity cameras were scanning the outside of the embassy at the time the bomb exploded. Police cordoned off the area to onlookers to begin searching for evi dence. On Nov. 14, President Belisario Betancur began signing extradition papers for five Colombians being sought by the United States on charges relating to drug trafficking. After Bentancur’s decision to ex tradite the suspected smugglers, au thorities said threats were made, al though it was not clear if they were made against the embassy or the dip lomats themselves. Coffee is officially Colombia’s chief export but illegal drugs are be lieved to be an even bigger industry and have become a major economic and political factor in the South American country. In Washington, the State Depart ment had no immediate comment on the blast, although earlier in the day, spokesman Alan Romberg con firmed that a “small number” of em bassy staffers and dependents had left the country because of terrorism linked to the crackdown on drugs. “Terrorist activities in Colombia have been a concern for some time and security arrangements at our embassy have reflected that,” Rom berg said. “It’s our view that recent developments in our continuing co operation and cooperative efforts with the Colombian government to address problems of drug traffick ing warrant particular vigilance at this time.” Prof explains history of kissing By AMY BOWMAN Reporter Vaughn Bryant can sit and talk about prehistoric feces, pollen spores and the history of kissing just like a proud grandfather talking about his grandchildren. Bryant is the head of the De partment of Anthropology at Texas A&M University. “I find my job very stimulating because I have the opportunity to be on the forefront of some very exciting things,” Bryant said. “I relish on a lot of activity. I never have five minutes without something to do, whether it’s talking on the phone or preparing lecture notes for my next class or answering letters. No two days are ever the same.” Bryant sits in his office talking to a reporter from National Geo graphic magazine about an article on pollen in the October edition of the magazine which featured him. His walls are covered with per sonal memorabilia — three diplo mas from the University of Texas, pictures of his family, a Distinguished Achievement in Teaching Award that Bryant re ceived in 1974, pictures of the Aggie bonfire and UT’s illumi nated tower. He slumps down in his chair while talking about pollen to the person on the phone. He explains himself to the reporter like an el ementary school teacher explains the next day’s homework assign ment to a class. A bottle of Old Spice sits on the window sill. His desk top is no where to be seen. Instead, there are file folders, a glass paper weight with a honeybee pre served inside it, two pipes in an empty ashtray, pencils, paper clips, a huge ceramic coffee mug and towering piles of paper. “My desk may not look like it, but I know where everything is,” Bryant said. There are hundreds of books lining the shelves of Bryant’s of fice. Their titles range from “Pa- laethnobotany” to “Trees of East Texas” to “Memoirs of Pancho Villa.” There are plastic dinosaur figurines, arrowheads and a col lection of miniature owls that also line the shelves. Vaughn Bryant is fascinating. His knowledge of so many sub jects coupled with his dry sense of humor make him a master story teller who can capture the atten tion of an audience for hours. However, Bryant is more than just a storyteller. He is a well-re spected member of the scientific community. He is one of the few people in the world who is an ex pert in the study of fossilized feces, known as coprolited. Bryant got his start in this field when he was on an archaelogy dig in West Texas. He was elected to find out what was in a specimen of fossilized feces, but it wasn’t until ten years later that Bryant compiled enough information on the subject. Bryant said he really devel oped “an interest in crap” when he studied with Canadian scien tist Eric Callen, a pioneer in the study of coprolites. After Callen died of a heart attack, Bryant was the only person known with an extensive knowledge of copro lites. He asked the Canadian gov ernment for Callen’s collection of coprolites and turned them over to A&M for study. Bryant, by studying fossilized feces, has developed a vast wealth of information on the caveman diet. After analyzing the diet of the caveman, Bryant put himself on a diet similar to that of the cav eman and lost thirty pounds. He gained endless publicity from his diet and was written about in papers from El Reno, Oklahoma to Idaho. “Everybody’s interested in di ets...they’re all looking for a quick and easy way to lose weight,” Bry ant said. “Most Americans consume about forty-four percent of their diets in fats.” Before going on his “caveman diet,” Bryant ate a typical diet high in sugar, fats and salt. “The biggest problem I found was withdrawl from salt,” Bryant said. Bryant is now a fit, healthy- looking man, graying slightly around the his temples. “No matter what Teat,” Bryant said, “I never use a salt shaker.” For dinner, Bryant prepares his own food. “My exciting portion of the day is making a big, beautiful, elab orate salad,” Bryant said. “I have all the accouterments, like lettuce, sprouts, tomatoes, carrots, cu cumbers, mushrooms and all that good stuff.” Bryant takes about forty-five minutes to eat his salad while reading the paper or watching the news. Bryant also is an expert on the history of kissing. The subject of kissing sparked his interest seve ral years ago when he was teach ing dn anthropology class and a question concerning the history of kissing came up. Bryant knew nothing about the history of kiss- ing. “I began trying to find out if See BRYANT, page 7 Looking for ‘world university’ 0.01.0 0.33.5 3.36.4 5.39.3 ditor’s Note: This is the second in a hree-part series on the future of Texas m. B Now that University President Frank E. Vandiver has named Texas A&M as a candidate for status as a world university, the actual future of the University has come under added scrutiny. Many agree with Vandiver’s con- :eptof a world university as an insti tution working on problems of fun damental importance to the world, but others have misunderstood his plans and still others view them only as a set of grandiose pipedreams. The major complaint with A&M’s in- dusion in the world university net work seems to be that many claim A&M already has too many prob lems that need to be corrected. These problems, some say, must be addressed before A&M can hope to attain a higher set of goals, such as world importance. Many of the problems facing A&M came into focus with the publi- ation of the Target 2000 report. The Target 2000 Project was com missioned by the Texas A&M Board af Regents in July 1981 and was charged with generating recommen dations that would lead to “recog- aized excellence for the Texas A&M University System and acknowl edged preeminence for the Univer- iity by the year 2000.” The 250- member committee, made up of citi zens autonomous from the Univer sity, studied the 11 parts of the Sys tem, defined major problems and, after 15 months of evaluation, pro posed solutions. The committee presented four re ports. Three of the reports ad dressed the findings of the three task forces and the System Report contained overriding ideas applica ble to the whole System. One controversial piece of advice from the System Report dealt with the role of University administra tors, specifically regents. “There have been instances in the past when some Board members of the Texas A&M University System have become operationally involved in decisions being made by the ad ministration,” the committee wrote. “The net impact of each of these role departures has been unfortunate.” Target 2000 Director Robert Shutes says one outcome of regential interference is a lack of continuity in administration. “One of the things they (the com mittee) felt very strongly about was that there has been far too much turnover in the top leadership of the University and the System,” he says. “When you look at the turnover from Earl Rudder to Jack Williams to Jarvis Miller, then a year of in terim with Charles Samson, and then Frank Vandiver, and that’s all since 1970, you see what I mean. “The committee said to the board, ‘If you want Texas A&M to become a great institution, one of the things you’ve got to do is quit this. The board has got to quit trying to ma neuver things. Let an administrator do what he is supposed to do and get out of his way.’” Another controversial recommen dation of the committee concerned proposed improvements in the Sys tem’s research thrust. “The committee took a look at the kind of research that was going on and they said, ‘Look, folks. What you’re doing in the way of research is mostly not research at all. It’s not basic research. What research going on is applied research that you’re paid for to solve a specific problem, not to pursue truth to wherever it leads.’,” Shutes says. “They said, ‘If you want to become a great univer sity, you better re-think the way you approach basic research.’” This is a point Vandiver stresses strongly in his world university con cept, and Associate Provost for Re search Duwayne Anderson says the impact of this section of the report can already be seen. The System Report also looks at the role of Texas A&M on the na tional and international levels and shows the difference between A&M’s role now and the role Van diver hopes it will play as a world university. “They (the committee) said that if Texas A&M is to become a great uni versity it has to be more visible na tionally and internationally,” Shutes says. “They looked at the way in which Texas A&M is rated or ranked for its academic programs and pointed out that we hit the top 20 or 50 very rarely. “The image of Texas A&M has to be more than just a place where Jackie Sherrill coaches or as the foot ball team or as the Corps of Cadets. That is, something bigger than a ste reotype. The committee felt that was very important.” The committee also stressed in its report the importance of Texas A&M’s gaining additional resources. “We need to develop major en dowments for Texas A&M and some kind of endowment for the other parts of the System,” Shutes says. “That should be done in a very care ful and organized way. “That’s still not as far a long as it should be, although a study has been done by some outside consultants on fundraising for Texas A&M and we’re talking about five to six hun dred million dollar endowments to do the things we want to do.” Money was also a factor in the re port’s policy on personnel recruit ment and retention. “Every time the board meets, there’s some new talk about en dowed chairs because of this,” Shutes says. “George Mitchell (Tar get 2000 chairman) was pounding on the table month after month after month saying, ‘Look at this report from the University of Texas saying they have 60 endowed chairs. What do we have? Three. They’re using Available Fund dollars as matching See WORLD, page 8 China says ships from U.S. allowed to dock in harbors United Press International PEKING — China has decided to allow U.S. warships to dock at Chinese ports for the first time in more than three decades, an official newspaper said Monday. U.S. diplomatic sources con firmed that the two sides were dis cussing a possible port call as early as next year but said no specific date had been set. “American warships will be al lowed to visit China’s ports if they are on ceremonial call and the re quest is made through diplomatic procedures,” Communist Party Gen eral Secretary Hu Yaobang was quoted as saying in the official China Daily, an English language newspa per. Western diplomats said a U.S. port call would be symbolic of the improvement in relations between the two countries. In a meeting with Japanese and Chinese businessmen on Sunday, the newspaper said Hu ruled out any military alliance with the United States but indicated a U.S. Navy port call could soon take place. “This is the first time that I know of that they (China) have publicly stated their willingness for a port call,” a U.S. diplomat said. “It’s been under discussion for some time, but I’m not aware of any specific date or place.” He said an agreement in principle for a U.S. port call was reached dur ing Navy Secretary John Lehman’s nine-day visit to China in August. Asked if Hu’s comment could be taken as an invitation, the diplomat said, “I guess you could read it that way.” Asked about reports that a U.S. port call could take place early in 1985, the diplomat said, “Nothing is planned for the first 30 days of the year.” i “This will be handled during dip lomatic consultations both in Wash ington and here,” he said. “There has been some discussion about tim ing, but I don’t think they have reached agreement yet.” There have been no port calls by U.S. warships to China in more than 30 years. More than 20 vessels from France, Britain, Canada, Australia and other Western nations, however, have docked at Shanghai in recent years. A 13-member Chinese Navy dele gation headed by Adm. Chen Youm- ing is on a 30-day visit to the United States. Officials said the Chen group wanted to discuss surface ship mod ernization and the upgrading of the Chinese fleet, but could also touch on the issue of a U.S. port call.