✓ China rocks to English pop group Associated Press PEKING — With sexy dancers in strapless dresses, colored strobe lights and a hard-dxiving backup band, Britain’s pop sensation Wham stunned a mostly Chinese crowd at a packed Peking stadium Sunday night in Communist China’s first big-name rock concert. The nearly two-hour, 10-song performance, including the hits “Wake Me Up Before You Co Go,” and “Wham Rap,” delighted the crowd of 12,000. The All-China Youth Federation is sponsoring the British rockers, who arrived T hursday w ith a crew of 105 and 30 tons of equipment for two concerts unprecedented in the world’s most populous nation. They play again on Thursday in Canton. Their music has officially been la beled “healthy” in China’s changing society, where in the 1960s and 70s the Communist Party banned danc ing and considered Western pop as banal and filthy. Some foreign rock songs and dances are still regarded with suspicion. Tickets cost the equivalent of $1.75. That is more than three times the price of the most expensive Chinese concert seats, but the tickets sold out a few hours after the box of fice opened on Friday. Slouch By Jim Earle “I hope the Governor realizes that by giving us Friday off, we’re gonna take off Monday, too.” Tornados start off slow around nation this year Associated Press DALLAS — When it comes to predictions about the tornado sea son, the weather wizards turn off their crystal balls and hang the “Out to Lunch” sign on the door. “Mother Nature is so changeable, it’s just impossible to predict what kind of year we’re going to have,” said Fred Ostby, director of National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City. But so far, experts say, 1985 has been a slow year for twisters. Nationwide, the weather service logged 57 tornados in the first th^ee months of 1985. “It’s been a relatively quiet first three months,” Ostby said. “We had three times that number last year.” In Texas, which usually leads the nation in tornados, the National Weather Service recorded no twis ters in January, only one in February and eight in March. “But that doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s going to be quiet in the fu ture,” Ostby warned. “For Texas, the best we can say is: April, May and June traditionally have the most tornados and that’s when folks should be on the alert.” If 1985 continues to be a slow year for twisters, it will track 1984 in Texas. Ostby said last year was rela tively calm — the state had only 93 tornadoes. “That’s a little below normal,” Ostby said. “Normally, Texas has about 125. The 93 was the fewest since 1966 in Texas.” He said the twister death toll in Texas last year was two. But nationwide, 1984 was more violent than ususal. Ostby said the nation logged 908 tornadoes in 1984. The storms last year claimed 122 lives, including 57 in a March 28 out break in the Carolinas. Tornados develop quickly out of violent storm systems, making them hard to predict. Although weather men can spot storm systems with tor nado potential a few days in ad vance, Ostby says a few hours is considered jjood advance notice of an approaching tornado. Often the notice is measured in minutes. “One of the greatest boons to a warning system is trained spora said Don Mankin, a NWS meteort gist in Fort Worth. “WheneverJ get storms developing, we actia our spotters. We have spottersirT most every county and mostarey radio operators. “A tornado will usually be ceded by a rotating wall cloud,j they report they see a wall that usually gives us a pretty lead time, usually about 20 mb The powerful, twisting winds tornado are the most violent b on earth. Mankin said they been clocked at up to 300 miles hour. Voi. so r The worst killer tornado on cord roared through Illinois, (liana and Missouri in March,' It killed 689 people along a 220-1 path. The worst killer tornados Texas each claimed 114 lives, occurred half a century apart Waco and McLennan County May 11, 1953, and in Goliad Con on May 18. 1902. Affirmative action World birthrate drops in ’84 according to private report Hiring quotas under fire I WASH I aclministru ||iet Uniot tsided’’ a pi b;uhev to 1 Associated Press Associated Press WASHINGTON — The world's birthrate has dropped from 29 to 27 births per 1,000 people since 1983, largely thanks to sharp curbs on China’s population growth, a private population study group reports. The Population Reference Bu reau reports that China is currently averaging 19 births per 1,000 resi dents, down from 23 only two years a 8°- . With one-fifth of the world’s pop ulation, changes in China’s popula tion have far-reaching effects on world averages, the independent, non-profit research group pointed out. The new statistics, estimating the world’s current population at 4.8 bil lion people, were published in the bureau’s annual World Population Data Sheet, compiled by demogra phers Mary Maderios Kent and Carl Haub. The current worldwide birthrate of 27 per 1,000, coupled with an av erage of 11 deaths per 1,000 people, results in an annual world popula tion increase of 1.7 percent, the re searchers reported. That is down from 1.8 percent in 1983. However, they noted that this rate still resulted in an extra 84 million people being added to the world’s population in 1984. They estimate the total number of people in the world will top 5 billion in 1987 and will exceed 6 billion by the year 2000 if current rates continue. The fastest population growth is in Africa, where the continent-wide birth rate is 45 per 1,000. WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration is facing resistance from many states and cities as it seeks to rid court-ordered affirmative action programs of race and sex-based hiring and promotion quotas. Officials in major cities, including Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia and San Francisco, say such programs are working well and should be left alone, a spot check by The Associated Press shows. The looming fight, centering on programs that grew out of the civil rights struggles of tne 1960s, raises the question of whether the Constitution demands color blind public hiring policies. Administration officials, led by Attorney General Edwin Meese III and civil rights chief William Brad ford Reynolds, say it does. Civil rights groups say no. And the Supreme Court hasn’t addressed the issue di rectly. Reynolds maintains the high court resolved the issue last June. In a 6-3 decision, the court held that Memphis, Bet nudes Bn Euro Monday. I Earlier 1 lews agem Tenn., officials violated the constitutional rightsof^ gan admin fighters covered by a seniority system to protectli “major net from layoffs. Y Bit to din After that ruling, Reynolds sent letters to offiriaBorld pub charge of administering some 50 state and local™ Robert ernment affirmative action programs, asking tfe: House nai join his department in asking federal courts tolie admin mandatory quotas from those programs. Khis is no An AP spot check of public statements by sta!t |||ome.” local officials showed that the administration wiB The p to force the issue in several cases. |||JBC New Lawyers and city spokesmen in Boston, Guar Soviet le; Cincinnati, Miami, Los Angeles, Philadelphia j tlorium “v Diego and San Francisco said they likely would!i| problems the Justice move. But some officials said they agreed with theJiis Department’s position. James Montgomery, Chicago corporation said the city will fight any attempt to get police and hiring and promotion quotas overturned. But Council committee on Wednesday voted along lines to call for an end to hiring and promotionqui o te jitfc S' J h d ulatj ta iiis N AA ff McDonald's DRIVE-THRU WINDOW MCDONALD’S EXTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS pne-sid Specific oviet U n heads aln iate-rang age of n fv'ATO all As a re Ko point p Balanced < I McFarl lion offic At University Drive At Texas and S.W. Parkway At Manor East Mall At 2930 E. Highway 21 BREAKFAST EVERY MORNING IM GAMEPLAN ENTRIES OPEN: FRISBEE GOLF — Entries open today, April 8, and close at the event site. The contest will be held Saturday, April 20 begin ning at noon. Ail contestants will meet at Mount Aggie. Partici pants must provide their own disc. Awards will be given to the winners of each division in sin gles and doubles. No entry fee. ENTRIES CLOSE: ARCHERY — Entries close Tuesday, April 16. The contest will be held Tuesday, April 23 beginning at 6 p.m. in 304 East Kyle. Times will be selected at registration. FITA rules will ap ply. Participants must supply own equipment. No compound bows may be used. \ ARCHERY CLUB NEWS Texas A&M has its own Merry Men, and women, in the form of the Texas A&M Archery Club. The Texas A&M club belongs to the National Archery Association. There are no NCAA archery teams because 18 to 20 teams compete at the collegiate level. While archery is popular in the West and East, the sport is just beginning to gain momentum in the South. Besides A&M, the only other team any where close is the University of Texas. Team members shoot with recurve bows since compound bows are against amateur rules. Shooting Olympic style, that is without a telescopic sight or me chanical release, three Aggies have qualified for the Outdoor Nationals to be held in West Virginia in May. Collegiate level archers compete under various conditions and distances. One competition, the Collegiate 900, requires the archer to shoot 30 arrows from dis tances of 40m., 50m. and 60m. By acquiring points, the archer strives for the highest score and perhaps a chance at national-level competition.The Texas A&M Archery Team is sponsoring an outdoor dual meet against the University of Texas this weekend on the polo field behind Zachry Engineering Center. Dn at, to i Offi flue ASTROS REDS vs. Charlie Hustle, better known as Pete Rose, and his Cinncinatti Reds will be playing the Houston Astros Tuesday, April 23 in the Astro dome. The Intramural-Recreational Sports Office is sponsoring a trip to and from the game. Cost for the trip is $20 per person. This price in cludes admission to the game and transportation to and from the Dome in an air-conditioned bus with restrooms, liquid refreshments, mun- chies for the ride down. The bus will leave from Parking Lot 60 (across from G. Roliie White Coliseum) at 5 p.m. and return immediately after the game. Reservations for the limited number of seats available will be taken until April 15 in the Intramural-Recreational Sports Office, 159 East Kyle. Contact Burnis Simon at 845-7826 for more information. H^srurl' I’m To Tne- CiAnt. hou foiNq AR& qerii'iq The THeze- ? REMINDERS: Softball team captains should check the schedules outside the Intramural Office every week to verify their team’s gametime. HOMERUN hitting finals will be held April 9. SOFTBALL playoffs are posted a week at a time. Teams should check the schedules every week. If it rains ALL teams should check the posted schedule since rescheduling will effect all teams. INNERTUBE Water Polo playoffs will be posted Tuesday, April 11 after 2 p.m outside the Intramural Office, 159 East Kyle. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS McDonald’s Intramural Highlights is sponsored in the Battalion by your local McDonald’s® Restaurants at University Drive, Manor East Mall and on Texas Avenue. Stories are written by members of the Intramural Staff, graphics are by Joel Nickerson, and photos are by Tom McDonnell and Marcy Basile. TRACK AND FIELD All-U finals for the Track Meet will be held Tuesday, April 9 at 7 p.m. in Kyle Field. Come on i cheer on the runners! B