• V - I Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, September 30, 1985 400 aided in quake crisis MSC Radio helping Aggies Photo by JAIME LOPEZ Eduard Bessoudo, a genetic engineering graduate student from Mexico City, is helping keep in touch with Mexico City. Volun teers mans the radio till around 3 a.m. every morning. By JUNEPANG Staff Writer “C,Q; C,Q; this is W5AC,this is W5AC, go ahead, ...” That’s how MSC Radio Commit tee members begin conversations with people all over the world. The committee uses Ham radio to com municate with people around the globe. Ham radio, a nickname for ama teur radio, played a key role in com municating with Mexico City after an earthquake shook that city last Thursday, damaging telephone lines between Mexico and the rest of the world. The radio committee handled 400 messages during the week after the earthquake, said Bob Plested, com mittee chairman. “One member heard on the (Ham) radio Thursday (Sept. 19) night that there was an emergency in Mexico,” Plested said. “Some Mexi can students knew we had the fa cility. They wanted to find out about their families.” By Friday morning, the first day after the disaster, most Mexican stu dents who had families in Mexico city knew the phone number of the committee either through friends or through International Students Services, Plested said. They called the committee to ask for help. “Thursday night, we worked until three o’clock in the morning,” he said. “The first two days after the earthquake, our phones just rang constantly.” Accoraing to John Meigs, a mem ber of the committee, normally it takes about 30 minutes to contact a Ham radio operator in Mexico City. But right after the earthquake, al most all the Ham radio operators in Mexico City were prepared to be on the air, so it only took a few minutes, he said. Once an operator in the United States has gotten in touch with an operator in Mexico, he gives a list of peoples’ names and phone numbers to contact to find out their situations. Then, the American operator waits for an answer while the other opera tor makes phone calls. This process can take from five minutes to one hour depending on how many phone calls he has to make, Meigs said. When there is not an emergency, the operators in the MSC Radio Committee also perform other serv ices such as sending birthday mes- ssages to relatives and friends all over the country, Plested said. The MSC Radio Committee usually has from 40 to 50 members, over half are licensed, he said. Because of the capability of two- way communication, Ham radio at tracts many people, Meigs said. “Ham radio operators are like an international fraternity,” he said. “There are certain people I’ve talked to several times.” He said he talked about “what happens in life” with them and their “ups and downs.” Dr. Dave Brooks, a licensed Ham radio operator who helped the com mittee during the earthquake crisis, said that owning a Ham radio is not as expensive as people might think. Brooks, an associate professor in oceanography at Texas A&M, esti mated that a Ham radio can cost from two to three hundred dollars to tens of thousands. Meigs said with the right weather, sun conditions and a little patience even a simple Ham radio is capable of world-wide communications. Meeting focuses on immigration Associated Press CORPUS CHRISTI — After con verging on this coastal city for the International Immigration Sympo sium 1985, factions left with re newed zeal to work on policy re forms, a symposium official said. Immigrant aid groups voiced grievances with U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service officials while cultural groups debated with Washington lobbyists over employer sanctions and pending legislation. The symposium attracted diverse political, cultural and academic ac tivists. And after it was over, participants went home ready to re-work immi gration policies, NIFCF President Rick Swartz said. “Although the symposium was not a decision-making body, both spon sors seemed enthusiastic about its ac complishments,” he said. “The symposium showed that while there is some disagreement in tactics and specifics of immigration policy reform, there is a lot of strength in the community that could facilitate change.” Among the participants were the National Council of La Raza, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the Ameri can GI Forum, as well as leaders from Lutheran, Jewish and Catholic organizations. Although the majority of the more than 100 participants seemed dissatisfied with pending immigra tion legislation, Swartz said few doubt that immigration reforms are needed. But symposium participants did more than just discuss immigration problems and policy. Workshop panels worked on specific courses of action, most designed to disseminate information on immigration legis lation. Participants agreed to create a Texas-Mexican Immigration Task Force and gather in Laredo on Wednesday. The task force will mo bilize a lobbying effort to educate South Texas congressional rep resentatives on immigration. Ray Leal, a symposium partici pant, said the group will invite seve ral Mexico governors and mayors as well. The task force also will focus on U.S. immigration policy and discuss ideas on now it can benefit both countries. Leal said. Another workshop panel urged participants to start a media cam paign to educate politicians as well as the general public on problems with pending immigration legislation. 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