V TexasA&M — — V • The Battalion Serving the University community 80 No. 73 USPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, December 12, 1984 Party hosts responsible for guests By LYNN RAE POVEC Staff Writer No doubt parties will be a part of ihe fast-approaching holiday cele brations, and planning ahead can teep the good time from being spoiled. Ifa host serves alcohol at his parly and a guest later is injured or killed in an alcohol-related accident, the host could be sued for damages. The host also could be sued if the drunk guest injures someone else or causes damage to another’s property. In a New Jersey case about eight months ago, a judge found the host of a party liable tor damages later caused by his intoxicated guest, said Kirk Brown, president of the local chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers and a member of the Texas AiM faculty. i Brown and Jan Winniford, assis tant director of student affairs at AiM. suggest some steps a host can take to keep guests from over-in dulging: • Don’t make drinking the pri mary focus of a party. Provide activ ities like games and dancing to cut jdown on the number of people standing around. • Make sure non-acoholic beverages are available to guests. Let the guest choose whether or not to drink, and honor his decision. Also, don’t en courage drinking by proposing toast after toast. • Serve snacks that are high in pro tein rather than salt. Potato chips usually make guests thirsty, but high-protein cheeses and vegetable dips slow the rate at which alcohol is absorbed into the blood. • Toward the end of the party, serve less alcohol and more food. A dessert, like cake with coffee, will turn guests attention from snacks and drinks. • Serve alcoholic drinks yourself, and don’t serve doubles. Some peo ple count and pace their drinks, and serving singles will cut down on their consumption. By serving guests yourself, you can monitor the pro portion or alcohol in a mixed drink. • Finally, take responsibility for guests. Designate drivers, those who will not drink, at the on-set of the party. If a guest is too intoxicated to drive, get him a ride or a taxi, or in vite him to stay the night. What flamingo is this? Texas A&M students David Restivo, Allan nativity scene this Christmas. This scene is Joy and Walter Smith got creative with their at 409 Aurora Court in College Station MSC spraying to go on for about 2 more weeks By KARLA K. MARTIN Staff Writer The parking inconvenience caused by the roof spraying of the Memorial Student Center should end in about two weeks, says Dennis Busch, assistant manager of the Uni versity Center. The old MSC roof, which is about 10 years old, is being replaced be cause of water leakages. The roofs of Rudder Tower and Rudder Theater were also replaced. Busch said that the new roofs are made with a new type of chemical foam that dries in seconds. “It’s sprayed on three or four inches thick,” Busch said, “and we saw that the strong winds could be a big problem blowing that foam around. “If cars parked next to the build ing and the foam landed on them before the it dried,” Busch said, “then the only way you could get it off would be to chip it off, and when you chip off the foam, you would probably chip off the paint too.” This $750,000 project, done by the CIA Roofing Construction Co., began in June and was expected to be finished by October, but bad weather slowed down its completion. Maj. Mike Ragan, assistant chief of the University Police Department, said there has not been too big of a problem with blocking off part of the road and the drive in front of the MSC. “For a while, the buses had prob lems manuevering between the bar rels (set out to block the parking spaces),” Ragan said. “But we finally got the barrels adjusted just right to where they^can drive through easily. “On the whole, people have hon ored the barrels and not parked the re.” While no complaints of car dam age caused by the roof spraying have been reported, Busch said the park ing still remains an inconvenience. Probation difficult to overcome This is the final article in a three part series on scholastic probation at Texas A&M. BySUZANNA YBARRA Reporter Most students say the hardest thing about scholastic probation is getting off. Philip Beard remembers his bout with scholastic probation in 1974 quite well. Beam, manager of LTni- versity Bookstore, was placed on robation after his first semester ere. Although he earned a 1.91 GPR — a grade point average that almost 4,000 students below a 2.0 here would envy — Beard says that first semester’s grades haunted him all the way to graduation. Why does Beard think he did so poorly? His reasons are common. “The college was so much differ ent from high school,” he says. “I got up here and didn’t know how to study and didn’t apply myself.” He attended help sessions but didn’t know where to go for outside help. Beard says his worst fear if he didn’t meet his probation terms was getting kicked out of married stu dent housing. “I probably couldn’t afford to live anywhere else,” Beard says. “Rent was $45 a month in the fall of ‘74.” He feared he would have to go to work full-time to support his wife Sandra. If he did that, he would never finish school. Beard says he was all on his own when it came to studying. His wife tried to help, but his studies went past what she had had in high school. Michael Foderetti gives his fiancee Lenette Mandola much of the credit for helping him overcome his grade problems. Foderetti, a manager trainee for Luby’s Resturaunts in San Antonio, transferred from Youngstown State in Ohio in 1981. He says moving down from Ohio by himself and learning to adjust to college life away from home were some of the reasons he posted a 1.8 his first semester here. He started working while going to school, which added an extra burden, and he says Texas A&M is more difficult than Youngstown State. “What turned it around was I put a lot more time into studying,” Fode retti says. “Lenette helped out a lot. It was through her studying habits that mine increased. Her major made her study so much that it rubbed off on me. I wanted to spend See Probation, page 13 Town keeps Christmas spirit all year United Press International CHRISTMAS, Fla. — Cards and packages are flowing into the post office, lines are forming and strang ers are finding their way around town. It’s Christmas time in Christmas. The atmosphere around Christmas hardly resembles a pic ture-book Christmas — the town in central Florida is 4,000 miles from the North Pole and snow would scare the residents to death. But Santa Claus is alive and well in Christmas and so is the Christmas spirit. “We always greet people with a smile,” said Joy Chittum, the post master. “We try to make them feel good, and we want them to leave in good spirits. The Christmas spirit.” Chittum’s tiny post office, adorned with orange shutters and Christmas greens, is the center of holiday activity in Christmas. Residents from all over Florida and tourists from all over the world — in central Florida to visit Walt Dis ney World or other attractions -— flock to the post office each Decem ber to mail tneir cards and packages for one reason: the Christmas post mark. People drive miles out of their way to stand in line at the post office. “With all the crowds we have and the long lines, we very, very rarely have anybody grumble or corn- lain,” said Chittum. “They come ere in the right frame of mind.” Others who can’t make the trip mail their cards in boxes to the post office for the postmark. Mail seeking the phristmas mark comes from as far away as Germany and Japan. Chittum expects her five-person office will hanale more than 150,000 pieces of mail this Christmas season. On some particularly busy days, the postal workers might handle 20,000 pieces of mail — 40 times the normal daily workload. The town has such street names as Reindeer Road, St. Nicholas Street and Antler Street, and a 40-foot “permanent” Christmas tree stays decorated year-round across the street from the post office. Christmas was named during a siege on Christmas Day 1837 when soldiers fighting the Seminole Indi ans occupied a Tog fort and called it Fort Christmas. A community grew up around the fort, which still stands, and many current residents are descendants of those settlers. Hostages say Iran supplied hijackers guns United Press International Two Americans freed from a hi jacked Kuwaiti airliner headed home Tuesday as other hostages charged that Iranian authorities supplied the hijackers with guns, ropes and handcuffs during six ter ror-filled days at Tehran airport. The Americans, scarred and bruised from beatings and torture at the hands of the hijackers, arrived in Kuwait with other hostages aboard a Kuwaiti jetliner that picked them up in Tehran, the official Kuwaiti News Agency said. Meanwhile on Tuesday, in Wash ington President Reagan’s spokes man charged Iran “clearly encour aged extreme behavior” by hijackers who murdered two Americans and warned the Khomeini government it must bring the sky pirates to justice. Deputy White House press secre tary Larry Speakes said Reagan “has a sense of outrage” that the tet rify- ing drama continued for six days. “Many aspects of the government of Iran’s handling of this situation raise profound and disturbing questions, to which we are seeking answers,” he said. Nonetheless, Speakes said, “WeVe seen enough to justify our conclu sions” that Iran failed to act promptly or humanely. Speakes noted that under an anti- hijacking treaty that Iran has signed, the government of the Ayatollah Ru- hollah Khomeini “has an obligation to submit the hijackers’ case to pros ecutorial authorities or to extradite them to another country for trial.” He warned that the “American at titude and actions toward (Iran) will be conditioned on whether it meets its obligations and by our assessment of its role during this tragic inci dent.” As Reagan ended a meeting with President Seyni Kountche of Niger, he was asked whether he planned to ' retaliate against Iran. “We’re waiting to talk to our people when they get back and understand” what hap pened, he said. “Even if they weren’t in collusion, the Iranians could have done a bet ter job,” Reagan said at the Wbite House. The Americans on board the hi jacked plane were Charles Kapar, a U.S. Agency for International De velopment auditor from Arlington, Va., and John Costa, 50, a New York businessman. Both were treated at a medical center in the Iranian capital. Two Britons, presumably Kuwait Airways pilot John Henry Clark and flight engineer Neil Beeston, four Kuwaiti officials and several passen gers from Tanzania and Middle Eastern countries, also were on the plane, the news agency reported. Two Americans, both AID offi cials, were killed by the air pirates, who seized the plane with 166 peo ple aboard last Tuesday after it stopped in Dubai en route from Ku wait to Pakistan. The ordeal ended Sunday when Iranian security guards stormed the Kuwait Airways jet and seized the hi jackers and freed the last hostages. The return of the hostages coin cided with charges from two re leased passengers in Karachi, Paki stan that Iranian authorities supplied the four Arabic-speaking hijackers with ropes, handcuff s and weapons. “They had silver-colored pistols when they hijacked the plane and they had nothing except that,” said Sheik Abdul Hafiz, 50, a Kuwait Air ways catering officer. “After two days, they had .38 re volvers, iron handcuffs they put on the American passengers and nylon ropes by whkm they tied me and other passengers,” he said. Speakes said Kapar and Costa would be flown to Frankfurt, West Germany to meet with U.S. officials. The bodies of the two Americans slain by the hijackers were flown ear lier to Frankfurt from Tehran. They were believed to be AID of ficials Charles Flegna, of Sterling, Virginia, and William L. Stanford, a resident of Karachi, Pakistan. Posi tive identification of the bodies was expected to be made in Frankfurt. The hijackers had demanded the release of 17 comrades jailed for bombing the U.S. and French em bassies and other U.S. commercial interests in Kuwait on Dec. 12, 1983. Kuwait refused to consider the de mand, a decision praised by Reagan. Koldus receives award for service By SARAH OATES Staff Writer ! Dr. John Koldus, Texas A&M -vice president of student services, has been named recipient of the regional Fred Turner Distin guished Service Award for out standing administrative service to students. The award, presented annually by the National Association of Student Personnel Administra tors Inc., honors Koldus as the top university student adminis trator in the Association’s region III, which is comprised of 11 Southeastern states. NASPA is di vided into six regions in the United States. “It’s nice,” Koldus said of the award. “It’s nice to be recognized by your colleagues.” The award is given to NASPA members who make “contribu tions above and beyond the nor mal service required by a position of leadership,” said Becky Tinker, a graduate student and NASPA member at the Univer sity of Louisville. Other requirements include 10 years of NASPA membership and nomination by three association members who are in leadership Dr. John Koldus roles. Koldus joined the Associa tion in 1967. “It’s very prestigious,” said Jan Winniford, A&M assistant direc tor of student services and a member of NASPA. “It’s a great honor to receive it.” Koldus also has been nomi nated for the award at the na tional level. The national Fred Turner Distinguished Service Award will be awarded in March at the Association’s annual con ference. Koldus said he plans to attend the conference.