I am d tional - The Moil its contn i amiliesanJ non famik] as racist, meed Iasi only hid >e placed i- decision [ port by oniI jrogramfM f rom thet “ prognut e 8 to |y purposttl i cation tlui| ations. | lie prograrl n by ISIliy (i older™ torney on, sakfskl c(|uiremtt| 1 — —— Proposal rejected I Luther Street crossing Annual prison rodeo to live on I Council anxious for substitution Pages 1 Page 3 ■ WW* I Texas A&M mm V# The Battalion Vol. 80 No. 76 CJSPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, January 15, 1985 initiated educatio st jdentsi Don e Churchtl -clay SaiitJ ? Mormoi e well ntcarj dians'wayl one shoul fe,"shesaii one wayp r. should w| while LIS Idren in If aids I® SRY DN still being Monday, o sign-up play be- d outside y begins ec office, Battalion by dl and on jraphiesare 3 only) Israel plans to pullout of Lebanon United Press International JERUSALEM — Israel's Cabinet Monday approved a plan for a three-staged withdrawal of Israeli troops from southern Lebanon that Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin said would begin in five weeks — with or without U.S. support. Official Israeli television said the unity Cabinet debated the plan for 11'/i hours over two days before 16 ministers voted for approval late Monday. Six ministers, including Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, were opposed. Rabin said implementation of the first stage of the plan will begin in five weeks. Until then, he said, Israel will try to persuade Lebanon and the United Nations to agree on an or derly withdrawal to make sure no “riots, massacres or any other distur bances occur." But Rabin said Israel would pro ceed with the plan “regardless of whether the United States or the Lebanese government or its army cooperate.” Rabin also warned that Israel | would strike swiftly to eliminate any | guerrilla cells that re-emerge in [southern Lebanon. "We will not hesitate to enter (southern Lebanon) to eliminate anv such efforts,” Rabin said. “We will I maintain a mobile and aggressive de- | fense system in order to ensure the safety of the settlers and the set- dements in the north.” Israel invaded Lebanon in June 1982 to rout out Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas attacking its northern border and forced the ex pulsion of PLO leader Yasser Arafat ! and his lighters from Beirut. Some 10,000 troops have remained in the ? country since the invasion. According to a Cabinet statement read by Cabinet Secretary Yosef Bei- > lin, the first stage of the plan calls for pulling Israeli Defense Force troops | irom front lines at the Awali river about 18 miles to the Litani-Naba- !; tiyeh area. The second stage would remove soldiers about 18 miles from the Be- kaa Valley in eastern Lebanon to the Hasbayaarea, the statement said. “In the third stage the IDF will i e- | deploy to the international border ; between Israel and Lebanon while I maintaining an area in southern I Lebanon where local forces — the South Lebanese Army — backed by the IDF will operate," the statement said. New drinking rules ‘a joke’ to clubs Photo by JOHN MA KEL Y By LYNN RAE POVEC Staff Writer Managers of local clubs and restaurants said the new law ban ning two-for-one happy hours has had little effect on their busi ness. “Businesswise, it’s a joke,” said Mike Earhart, assistant manager of Roxz in Post Oak Mall. Earhart said clubs “can just cut the price of drinks down to nothing” in stead of serving more than one drink. Late last month, the Texas Al coholic Beverage Commission made the new rules which pro hibit selling multiple containers of drinks for the price of one, but don’t ban half-price drinks. Local managers said they’re not worried about the rules be cause of the many possibilities of getting around them. For exam ple, serving two drinks at the same time, usually done during happy hours, is prohibited, hut putting both drinks into one larger glass is not. “It sounds a little ridiculous,” Sheri Talbot said. Talbot and her husband manage Casa Tomas Mexican Restaurant in Bryan. “With our clientele (during ■happy hour) being mostly college sluclents — mostly girls — they’ll have one or two frozen margari- tas, and that’s all they’ll have,” Talbot said. “If they get two-for- one, they’ll split it.” Casa Tomas’ most popular spe cial during happy hour has been a frozen margarita for $1.25, and the new rules don’t affect it, Tal bot said. The rules also don’t affect more important promotions, Texas Restaurant Association of ficials charge, such as substan tially-reduced drink prices, free drinks and nickel beer specials. The rules don’t ban “drink and drown” promotions that allow pa trons to drink all night for a nom inal price. Joe Darnall, executive assistant to the commission’s administra tor, said the rules are “meant to reduce the rapid consumption our agents have observed.” The commission is not con cerned with the price club and restaurant managers are charg ing for drinks, but with the num ber of drinks they’re serving, he said. When multiple containers are part of the bargain, as during happy hours, a customer who de cides U> have a drink suddenly has two or three in front of him, Darnall said. He said commission agents re ported excessive abuses of two- ior-one promotions, which caused the commission to target such promotions for the ban. Specials at The Zephyr Club on Harvey Road, are not affected by the ban, Manager Shahin Vo- sough said. The club doesn’t of fer two-for-one specials, hut of fers large-sized drinks instead. But Scandals in College Station had to discontinue its four-f'or- one happy hour on Fridays. “We used to have four-for-one on Friday, and we can no longer do that, obviously,” said Scandals’ Manager Debbi Schalloch. In stead Scandals is offering 50-cent drinks for an hour on Fridays. The results businesswise are about the same for the club, Schalloch said. The difference is that people don’t have to have four drinks. TABC officials expect few problems with compliance to the new regulations. Only the re tailer, not the patron, can be fined, and fines ranging front $25 to $100 will he assessed to vi olators. The ban is being called “a first step” by the Bryan-College Sta tion chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers. MADI) Vice President Don Clark is pleased with the law. But, he added, the new regulations just don’t go far enough. Faculty address disqrmannenf of University police Senate proposes no guns on campus By CATHIE ANDERSON Staff Writer T he Faculty Senate considered a proposal by faculty senator Phanindramohan Das Monday that would forbid T exas A&M University police officers from carrying guns on campus. “A university has a different envi ronment,” said Das, a professor in the Meteorology Department. “It is a kind of sanctuary. The main thing is the spirit of inquiry.” The open display of guns on cam pus now conflicts with the purpose of a university because people at a university are expected to do a cer tain amount of self-policing, Das said. He said general supervision is necessary on campus, hut that he sees no need for guns to be carried around in all areas of police work. Dr. Thomas Kozik, a senator from the Mechanical Engineering Depart ment, suggested that an advisory group meet with the campus police and come up with some ideas to han dle unique student problems or non criminal confrontations without the use of weapons. But he said the ide als of a university could remain in tact although guns are openly dis played by police officers. Kozik said an advisory committee is also a way to start a better channel of communications with the campus police. “The relationship between the faculty and the campus police has been a one-way street.,” Das said. “T he police force is hired by the ad ministration and the faculty has no input into that relationship.” Das said guns could be neld in po lice headquarters until officers need them, and then a designated officer could specifically approve the use of weapons by officers when an emer gency situation arose on campus. The proposal said individuals should not be able to carry guns on campus, but Das stressed that he would make three exceptions: • for ceremonial purposes such as Silver Taps or Aggie Muster, • for use during classroom instruc tion, • and for display in museums on campus. In a policy change, Rabin said Is rael would allow Lebanon’s regular army to take over the area the Israe lis will vacate either directly or from theU.N. Interim Force in Lebanon. In recent withdrawal talks in the southern Lebanese town of Na- qoura, Lebanon has repeatedly in sisted its army be allowed to move into vacated areas but Israel has un til now refused to agree. Israel had demanded that U.N. peace-keeping troops and SL.A militiamen take over security in the region. In anticipation of an Israeli with drawal, the Lebanese arrnv has be gun deploying troops along the highway leading to Israel’s front lines. The Cabinet Statement did not say when the final phase of the withdra wal would take place, but news re ports earlier said it could be com plete within nine months. “Decision on the timing of each stage will be made by the govern ment ... efforts will continue to achieve political agreements,” the statement said. Israel has lost 606 soldiers since invading Lebanon — 86 of them killed in guerrilla attacks by militant Shiite Moslems since pulling back from Beirut in September 1983 to what was said to be a more secure line along the Awali river. Research group: Texas students pay too little fees Hump it, baby Photo by FRANK IR WIN Gabe Thorton ,3, humps it with his father, assistant basketball coach John Thorton, during All-University Night at G. Rollie White Coliseum Monday night. Behind Gabe are head basketball coach Shelby Met calf and his daughter, Shelley. United Press International AUSTIN — Texas college and university students — many of them from families who earn more than $30,000 a year, pay too little in tu ition, the Texas Research League said Monday. “No other state provides nonresi dent students the bargain-basement tuition rates that Texas does,” said the report by the Austin-based pub lic policy research league. It said Texas could double its tu ition and fees and still remain “sub stantially” below the average charged by other states. As part of his plan to erase a $1 billion revenue deficit, Gov. Mark White is expected to recommend to the Texas Legislature Tuesday that it raise out-of-state, foreign and pro fessional school tuition. But White reportedly does not fa vor any increase in general under graduate tuition, which was raised last year for foreign and out-of-state students. The Research League noted that the median income of families with a student in a Texas public university or college was $31,739 in 1982, well above the median income for all families. “By maintaining low tuition rates the state is, in effect, providing large subsidies to all college students re gardless of their economic status,” the report said. The study said tuition charged a Texas resident to attend a state-sup ported university has not changed much in nearly three decades, de spite a fivefold increase in the amount the state spends per student for college instruction. The study said Texas collected in 1983 less than 2 percent of the $2.4 billion appropriated by the Legis lature for higher education. An out-of-state student pays $1,362 for a nine-month school year in Texas, less than Maine, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, New York, Michigan and Oregon charge their own residents to attend their state schools. Also, a Texas undergraduate who goes to a state university in Califor nia would pay $3,274 in tuition and fees — more than double the amount a Californian would pay to attend a Texas state university. The report said charges at Texas medical and dental schools could in crease fivefold and still remain be low the national average. The Research League study did not recommend a specific tuition in crease, but it suggested charges could be assessed at about 15 per cent or 20 percent of the institutio nal education costs. It also said lawmakers should con sider charging higher tuition for “upper-level” institutions, such as the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University, and for graduate or special programs.