L Q <- K L 0 ,i ^ ! q|^ ! c 3 5 : | jE llgoS f 3S ;c ! S'ssSs I CD *1 P FAAto give additional funds to extend Easterwood runway — Page 4 Ap Sherrill, Aggies look toward future after win over NLU Page? PVPM Texas A&M m m v# The Battalion ; Vol. 81 No. 210 USPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Monday, September 23,1985 fbhancellor Hansen announces retirement D.t A/f A D\/DI? r r , U r>I_I C K.T 17 O f t 11 1-1.1 i . 1 ww . . , , ^ ~ ^ ^ Q am 1 o d Q X c r“ 3 S'- By MARYBETH ROHSNER Staff Writer g-ij-Puncellor exas A&M University System Arthur G. Hansen an- , ^ nounced plans to retire in 1986 at a ~ 3r' ^ Board of Regents meeting Sunday. r I 5?B'I’ve been in administration for | 0^5 jtoKn I' 20 years — about 17 as a CEO r executive officer) . . . and it is 2 ^ Q 5'time to change pace,” Hansen said, i ^ n c| Hansen - sa ‘^ l ^ al ^though he i 5 j enjoys his job, he has always wanted * 0 5" t0 8° ' nto business for himself as a <3 consultant. 5" S' SB“The time was right, given my Hansen said of nis decision. “I S Qx couldn’t put it off much longer.” ’ : |hild injured following Aggie game Hansen added that he wanted to step aside as chancellor during the lull between legislative sessions and that he and his wife had been consid ering leaving the system for several months. Hansen informed Board of Regents Chairman David Eller long before the official announcement. Eller said he reluctantly accepted the fact that Hansen was retiring. “Dr. Hansen is one of the best things ever to happen to the Texas A&M University System,” Eller said. Eller expressed appreciation to Han sen for his contributions over the past three years. Texas A&M President Frank Van diver said he was surprised and dis appointed to see Hansen leave. “He’s done an absolutely wonder ful job,” Vandiver said. “I thought he was just settling in and was plan ning to stay with us for a while.” Hansen stressed that he wanted to help the board make a smooth tran sition, including using “national con tacts” to find a new chancellor if the board asked for his assistance. “The quicker we can get someone (to fill the position), the better off we’ll be,” Hansen said. He said that the next chancellor should have the benefit of planning budgetary and legislative proposals before having to implement them. If necessary, Hansen said he was willing to serve through 1986 if the board was un able to find a new chancellor quickly. A search committee made up of regents and administrators will choose the new chancellor for the A&M system, which includes Texas A&M University, Prairie View A&:M University, Texas A&M at Galves ton, Tarleton State University and seven research and extension serv ices. Hansen said the board may use the services of a private consulting firm to find a qualified person. Before coming to the Texas A&M system in 1982, Hansen served as president of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, for 11 years. He previously was presi- By FRANK SMITH Staff Writer A 12-year-old girl was reported in stable condition at St. Joseph Hospi tal yesterday afternoon after suffer- iife a broken leg on Kyle Field fol- louing Saturday night’s Texas A&M Uotball game. ■ A spokeswoman at St. Joseph said the girl suffered a fractured femur. ■ Bob Wiatt, director of University Police, said the girl was injured when she ran onto the field at the conclu sion of the game and collided with an unknown person or persons as peshmen members of the Corps of fCaclets chased after the yell leaders — in celebration of the Aggie vic tory. ■ “She was one of many students — [kids — in the west side of the stands,” Wiatt said Sunday. “She ran out just as the Corps was running out on the field from the east side of the stands. B “This is a big problem. We’re aware of it. I don’t know how you can control it unless they quit this frenzied running,” Wiatt said. “It’s lust a miracle that no others have been hurt.” | Hugh Mainzer of the University ambulance service said that an am bulance arrived at the stadium at 8:58 p.m. Because of the nature of the injury, medics had to stabilize the injured area before moving the girl from the site, he said. He said moving a patient with such an injury before stabilizing the region can risk harming the major arteries in that area of the leg. “It can be a very serious injury,” ainzer said. The girl arrived at St. Joseph at 9:45 p.m., he said. Marching On! Jennifer Peeler of Ennis performs with the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band for the first time. Peeler, with Derek Shaffer (left) and John Trus- Photo by ANTHONY S. CASPER cott marched during halftime of the A&M - North east Louisiana football game Saturday. Peeler is one of three female cadets in the band. Beverages taken seriously People like drinks that fizz, expert says Associated Press How about something to drink? How about a new Coke? An old Coke? With or without caffeine? With or without calories? Abrew, maybe? Low-cal? Light al cohol? No alcohol? Perhaps wine. Regular alcohol, light alcohol or no alcohol? A wine cooler? Maybe some fruit juice with sparkling water? Or just plain water? Water? Over the last two decades Ameri cans have forsaken tap water for beverages with fizz and flavor. This year the nation will spend an estimated $60 billion to slake its thirst. So seriously do people take their beverages that Coca-Cola’s decision to fiddle with its 99-year-old formula became front-page news. Jesse Meyers, publisher of Bever age Digest, estimates the average consumer now drinks 42 gallons of soft drinks per year, 26 gallons of coffee, 25 gallons of beer, 20 gallons of milk and 43 gallons of water. That last figure is a bit misleading, since it counts the water contained in foods; for example, the water in a popsicle. Fifteen years ago Americans quaffed 64 gallons of water to 27 gallons of soft drinks, 36 gallons of coffee, 23 gallons of milk and 19 gal lons of beer. “Find me somebody who gets farmAid raises millions to help farmers Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, III. — Flanked by huge banners reading “Keep Amer ica Growing,” Willie Nelson and doz ens of other music stars on Sunday sang, fiddled and strummed through a rain-soaked FarmAid con cert, raising millions to help the na tion’s struggling farmers. “Thank you very much for com ing to the concert for America,” shouted Nelson, the driving force behind the 14-hour concert featur ing some 50 stars of country music, rock and blues. As a crowd of more than 78,000 filed into the University of Illinois football stadium, Nelson and Neil Young teamed up to sing “Are There Any More Real Cowboys.” Nelson then brought cheering fans to their feet with “Whiskey River.” Nelson said a nationwide tele vision and radio audience was calling pledges in at a rate of $500,000 an hour. Singer Brenda Lee, who em ceed the program for cable tele vision, said about $3 million was pledged by late afternoon. That was in addition to $4 million promoters said was raised before the concert began. Nelson has said the concert’s pur pose was to raise money to help needy farmers and to increase public awareness of farmers’ problems. “We want everyone to call in from ‘Surf City* or wherever,” lead singer Mike Love of the Beach Boys, told the audience. Music styles ranged from the rock of the Blasters to the country of George Jones and from the blues of B. B. King to the classics of Roy Or- bison. Carole King played a white pi ano on the front edge of the stage with the FarmAid curtain as a back drop. As darkness approached, John Fogerty — formerly of Credence Clearwater Revival — had the audi ence clapping and dancing, and told them, “Next time you sit down to a meal remember it didn’t come in a cellophane bag from Safeway, some farmer put his whole life into grow ing that food.” . A steady rainfall began shortly af ter the concert opened at 10 a.m. The rain stopped in the late af ternoon, and overcast skies greeted the evening performances carried live on 156 television stations. Some concert-goers covered themselves with sheets of clear plas tic, while others huddled beneath umbrellas or hooded raincoats. dent of Georgia Tech, where he be gan his administrative career as the college of engineering dean. At the time he accepted the Georgia Tech deanship, he was chairman of the mechanical engineering department at the University of Michigan, where he joined the faculty in 1959. Hansen received a bachelor’s de gree in electrical engineering And a master’s degree in mathematics from Purdue. He received his doc torate in mathematics from Case In stitute of Technology. Hansen, a Marine during World War II, worked in aeronautical re search for NASA from 1948 to 1958. Chancellor Arthur G. Hansen Death toll tops 1,900 following Mexico quakes turned on by a glass of tap water anymore,” he challenges. There are many theories about the change in the nation’s drinking habits. Martin Romm, who follows the beverage industry for First Boston Corp., a New York investment firm, says sodas have more “zip and ap peal.” “The consumer is drinking water See Beverages, page 12 Associated Press MEXICO CITY — Mexicans bur ied their dead Sunday and prayed more survivors would be found as the mayor’s office in Mexico City raised the official death toll from last week’s twin earthquakes to 1,952. The mayor’s spokesman, Hum berto Romero, said another 2,000 people remained trapped under col lapsed buildings and were feared dead. Mayor Ramon Aguirre said 2,000 more remained trapped under col lapsed buildings and were feared dead. The back-tq-back tremors col lapsed 411 buildings in Mexico City alone, Aguirre said. Six thousand people were treated for injuries, and 5,000 capital residents rendered homeless by the quakes were being housed in refugee centers, the mayor told the AP. In Washington, State Department spokesman Dan Lawler said the Mexican government had raised the official death toll to 3,461. Four Americans have been con firmed killed, Lawler said. Thousands of people, many wear ing masks against the smell, passed slowly through makeshift morgues, looking for familiar faces among de composing bodies. Authorities, worried about the threat of disease, said bodies un claimed after 48 hours would be buried in mass graves. “Most of them are unidentified,” said Red Cross Lt. Uri Fridman at the Old Seguro baseball park, which was turned into a morgue. Thousands gathered to hear Ro man Catholic Mass at the Basilica of our Lady of Guadalupe, the city’s largest church. The first quake rocked the city Thursday morning. It measured 7.8 on the Richter scale. The tremor Fri day measured 7.3 on the scale. Airplanes from around the world shuttled aid to the stricken capital, the world’s largest with about 18 mil lion people. A C-141 arrived from Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio, carrying a 19-member team organized by two construction companies, Spirit Con struction of Baton Rouge, La., and the H.B. Zachry company of San Antonio. They plan to evaluate structures for demolition. Brazilian President Jose Sarney, enroute to the opening session of the United Nations in New York, stopped with relief aid. Other Latin American officials also were ex pected to stop here. Nancy Reagan, wife of President Reagan, was arriving Monday. Governments of more than 20 countries and international organi zations sent tons of food, medicine and other provisions. Foreign relief teams, some aided by dogs, fanned out to help rescue workers, many of whom had not slept since the first quake. “We are not cleaning up, what is essential is to get the bodies out and, if possible, someone alive,” said Mi guel Figueroa, who had been work ing at the site of a five-story apart ment building since Thursday. As many as 10 people were believed still under the rubble of plaster and con crete. Occasionally, the crews pulled out a child or an adult, still alive, after more than three days. Aguirre -said that since rescue operations began, 1,011 people had been pulled alive from the rubble. Five thousand homeless were sheltered at schools and other public buildings. Some huddled in parks and streets. Many left the city to stay with family and friends in towns un hurt by the quake. Water pipes in the southern part of town were damaged and some parts of the city were without water. Aguirre said 1,000 water trucks would be on the streets Sunday dis tributing water. Looks can be liability for women executives Associated Press Beauty has always been consid ered an asset for women, but in the executive suite it becomes a liability. “Good looks are a benefit to a man,” psychologist Madeline Heilman said in the October issue of Science Digest, “but often pre sent problems for women in their climb to the top.” Heilman and graduate student Melanie Stopeck of New York University recently completed a study that shows attractiveness as a positive attribute for a man on his way up the corporate ladder, but a detriment for women. The researchers asked 113 randomly chosen men and women working in the New York City area to review career de scriptions and photographs of fic titious executives. The career descriptions were identical, except some were “overnight successes” who had climbed to the top in three years, and others represented a more normal 10-year success story. The photographs were of at tractive and unattractive men and women. The 113 people were given questionnaires and asked to rate the factors responsible for the ex ecutives’ success — luck, ability, effort — and to choose among adjectives describing them. The results, reported in the Journal of Applied Psychology, were: • Handsome male executives were perceived as having more integrity than less attractive men. See Beauty, page 12