Automated sprinkler system winning recognition for A&M — Page 3 Aggie spikers get through sloppy victory over Hofstra — Page 8 PWM Texas ASM m fj • The Battalion ,1.82 No. 27 GSPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 15, 1985 White urges universities to improve Associated Press AUSTIN — Texas’ top political leaders Monday told a special com mittee on higher education the state’s colleges are it) good shape but could,and should, he better. “1 have said it before and I say it again:: educated minds are the oil and gas of our future,” said Gov. Mark White. While, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and Speaker Gib Lewis spoke to the 23- member Select Committee on Higher Education, which was cre ated by the 1985 Legislature to make recommendations to the 1987 legis lative session. White said the committee meets under different circumstances than the so-called Perot Committee, which “met in an atmosphere of cri sis” to rescue Texas' public educa tion system. That committee’s recommenda tions resulted in the public educa tion reform measures of 1984. “There is no similar crisis in higher education today,” White said. "We do not have a system that is in need of radical ref orm. "You do not have the awesome re sponsibility of saving a ship before it sinks. But you will be dealing with is sues that are much more complex, yet subtler by nature. ‘Any good mechanic can repair a car that is about ready to break down. But it takes a special kind of mechanic to prepare a well-tuned automobile for world-class competi tion," White said. “And make no mistake about it — that is your re sponsibility; to tell us what we need See White,page 12 Photo by Greg Bailey Modern-day Columbus Sanders Letbetter, University Center business manager, poses as Christopher Columbus and gives passersby the “Gig’em” sign during Monday’s grand opening of the Bus Stop Snack Bar. Prizes and refreshments were given away to celebrate the opening of the new snack bar. The snack bar is on the corner of Ireland and Ross streets in f ront of the Reed McDonald Building. U.S. officials demand rebel be extradited Associated Press WASHINCiTON — Top law en forcement officials in the Reagan ad ministration insisted Monday that a Palestinian guerrilla leader accused of masterminding the Italian cruise liner hijacking be brought to the United States to face trial. The State Department also de clined to provide an apology de manded by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, angered over last week’s U.S. interception of an Egyp tian jetliner carrying the hijack sus pects. The administration, rebuffed ear lier by Italy in an attempt to have Mohammed Abu el Abbas arrested, made no headway in getting his pro visional arrest in Yugoslavia, pen ding a formal extradition request. In fact, the Yugoslav news agency reported that Abbas, 38, was out of the country. The White House said it had no independent confirmation of that. However, CBS News said its cor respondent in Tunis, Tunisia, had spoken to Abbas by telephone in Yu goslavia shortly before 9 a.m. EDT — after the Palestinian leader was al ready said to have left. CBS quoted Abbas as saying that Yugoslav authorities had told him he could stay as long as he wanted. The network did not say how its corre spondent knew that the man to whom he spoke was Abbas. The State Department said the United States was asking Yugoslavia for confirmation that Abbas had lef t the country. The statement also said: “We have not vet received a response from the Yugoslav government to our request that Abbas he provisionally arrested pending a . formal extradition re quest from the United States.” Abbas, also known as Abul Abbas, is dose to Palestine Liberation Orga nization chairman Yasser Arafat and heads a wing of the Palestine Liber ation Front. He has denied that he was involved in the hijacking, in which an American, Leon Klinghof- fer, 69, of New York City, was killed. Italian news agencies reported that a fifth Palestinian has been named in an arrest warrant as an ac complice in the hijacking of the cruise ship Achille Lauro and the death of an American passenger. The news agencies said judicial sources in Genoa identified the fifth suspect as Kalaf Mohammed Zainab, 21, and reported he had been in cus tody since Sept. 28 after he disem barked from a Tunisian ship in Genoa with Iraqi and Moroccan passports. In Washington, State Department Dan Lawler said he had no informa tion on a fifth man being held by Italian authorities and said he did not know whether the U.S. would seek his extradition. In other developments Monday, the State Department said Syrian au thorities have discovered the body of an elderly man who washed ashore near the port city of Tartus, and U.S. officials were seeking to learn if it was Klinghoffer’s. Egypt calls for apology Associated Press CAIRO, Egypt — President Hoshi Mubarak, angry and apparently un moved by American efforts to de fuse tensions, said Monday he wanted an apology from President Reagan for intercepting an Egyptian airliner carrying four hijackers. He said an apology “is needed for all Egyptians. There shouldn’t he a per sonal apology in this matter.” Mubarak said he hoped the cloud hanging over relations between the two allies would soon be dissipated, but for the moment, he said he was still “very upset.” Mubarak defended his decision to deliver the four men to the Palestine Liberation Organization for trial at Yasser Arafat’s headquarters in the Tunisian capital. He said a trial in Italy or the United States, “will not stop the vio lence.” “Had the Italians and Americans not taken these people, I think they would have avoided lots of things which may take place in future,” he said. “If Arafat didn’t punish them, then he would be responsible before the whole world,” Mubarak said. U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Ve- liotes delivered a letter from Reagan to Mubarak on Sunday, but the Egyptian president said he had not even read it. He said he was still wait ing for a public apology. On tap Local water tested for organic compounds, radioactivity, bacteria levels College Station Tap Water TDK STANDARDS Radioactivity Levels Gross Alpha less than 2.0 pCi/L . 15.0 pCi/L Gross Beta less than 4.0 pCi/L 20,008 pCi/L Trihalomethane Levels TTHM Potential 0.067 0.10 "11)11” stands lor the "Texas Department ol The last test lor radioaefivitv levels in the cits’ sear. Health.” Total trihalomethane water svas in 1982,while the la potential is expressed in (nm/I ). st TTHM test was conducted this Editor's Note: This is the second in ;i five-purt series ot articles con cerning the tap water in the city of College Station and at Texas A&M. Today's article deals with the radio activity levels and biological compo nents of College Station s tap water. By TRENT LEOPOLD Senior Stall Writer In addition to testing for inor ganic chemicals in the tap water, state water standards require cities to test domestic water supplies for bacteriological quality, radioactivity levels and organic compounds known as triaholmethanes to ensure that the waiter is safe to drink. K. Daniel Linstedt, an assistant civil engineering professor at the University of Colorado and an ad viser to the American Water Works Association in Denver, says the bac teriological analysis is concerned with determining the number of mi croorganisms per unit volume of wa ter. ‘Such an analysis provides an in- iication of the pollutional load of a water source,” he says. “In water with a low organic content, the total number of microorganisms is low since food is the limiting factor.” In water containing a high con centration of organics, the bacteria will predominate with the number of bacteria as high as 10 to 100 million per milliliter of sample, he says. Texas Department of Health stan dards state that the College Station tap water be tested for bacteria at least 45 times each month to be sure that bacteria do not exceed the maxi mum prescribed level. Elry Ash, College Station’s city en gineer, says at least 40 tap water samples are tested lor bacteria each month in College Station by the Bra zos County Health Department. However, a spokeswoman at the health department says at least 500 samples are taken from various loca tions around the city and tested for bacteria each month. Bacteria serve as food for higher forms of life such as protozoa, Lins- tedt says. Protozoa are one-celled an imals that comprise the simplest form of life and certain forms of protozoa are known to cause disease. Chlorine constantly is added to the water supply to kill any bacteria. And in College Station, the level of chlorine is monitored about every 30 minutes. Generally, the residual chlorine level in College Station’s tap water is about .2 milligrams per liter, but it varies each hour. “If bacteria levels get too high in the water the results are usually clearly evident,” Linstedt says. “People get sick real quick (when bacteria levels are too high) and that’s basically the reason why the bacteria levels are watched so close- ly.” The tap water’s radioactivity levels must be monitered at least once ev ery four years, according to state standards. Tests must be conducted more frequently in the vicinity of mining or other operations which may contribute alpha particle radio activity to the drinking water source. Both the alpha and beta particle levels must he tested. Alpha particles are positively charged, while beta particles are negatively charged. “The effects of human radiation - exposure are viewed as harmf ul and any unnecessary exposure to ioniz ing radiation should be avoided,” Linstedt says. “What’s interesting is to look at what the. maximum levels for gross beta levels were about 20 years ago compared with what they are today.” In 1968, the maximum allowable beta levels varied from state to state but a general figure was about 1,000 pCi/L. Texas’ current maximum limit is 20,000 pCi/L. A pCi is a measurement for the rate of decay of the nucleus of an atom by emission of particles accom panied by electromagnetic radiation. Usually this level is tested in a one- liter sample of water. Finally, College Station’s tap water must be tested for maximum total trihalomethane potential. “Maximum total trihalomethane potential” means the maximum con centration of total trihalomethanes produced in a given sample of water containing a disinfectant residual af ter seven days. A trihalomethane is one of the f amily of organic compounds named as derivatives of methane. They in clude such compounds as trichloro- methane and tribromomethane. Tomorrow: A look at other se lected components in College Sta tion’s tap water which the state of Texas has no maximum allowable levels for. Forbes lists the richest of the rich Associated Press NEW YORK — The richest of the rich in America is worth $2.8 billion, while the poorest of the rich checks in at a mere $ 150 mil lion. But who’s counting? Forbes magazine, that’s who, and its 1985 list of the nation’s 400 richest people is topped by Sam Moore Walton of Benton- ville, Ark., who has made $2.8 bil lion through his Wal-Mart dis count stores. Walton, who danced a hula on Wall Street last year when profit goals were met, replaced Gordon Getty, the front-runner for the past two years. Getty dropped to 15th. Getty’s fortune was $4.1 billion last year, but he agreed to divide the family oil trust with other family members, leaving him barely $950 million. Second place went to Henry Ross Perot of Dallas, founder of Electronic Data Systems, who was $1 billion behind Walton. Agriculture and oil were down. Seven Texas oilmen who ap peared last year were dropped from the list. In addition to listing the 400 wealthiest individuals, Forbes also listed the richest families, which includes Cabots, Kennedys, and the beermakers Coors and Stroh. The list, to appear on Forbes’ Oct. 28 issue, provides a fascinat ing portrait of the rich in Amer ica. The average net worth of the 400 is $335 million. There are 14 billionaires. Only 165 built their fortunes without significant in heritances. Forty-one of the men and 38 of the women are unmarried. And 113 have been divorced. Most of the rich are not very famous. James Jaeger, 37, the youngest of the self-made rich, earned $175 million with automotive ra dar detectors. Max Palevsky, 61, is a computer designer who made $200 million. Philip Hampson Knight used to sell sneakers. He still does, in a way. He owns $195 million worth of Nike. leacher: Beirut’s children lead distorted lives Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — They may not know irimm’s fairy tales, but Beirut’s children can ell the difference between the sound of a lOtimin recoilless rifle and a 120mm mortar. Toddlers can tell an incoming shell from an lutgoing. * They are Lebanon’s war generation, raised luring a decade of civil war and facing bleak ears ahead in a country in ruins. “If we continue this way, our future is a erv sad one with the kind of children we re aising," said Iman Khalif e, a Beirut nursery eacher. “One wonders what these children will be ike when they are older, what with all the ug- ness surrounding them." Amid daily fighting, a generation of chil- Iren has lost direction. “Achild is no longer a child,” said Khalife. She said the 3- and 4-year-olds she works dth “don’t talk about the kind of things that children normally talk about. Then conversa tions revolve around shelters, explosions, bat tles and fighting, electricity cuts and water shortages." Their favorite game is “war,” she said in an interview. “They pretend a shell has exploded nearby and then they all start to scream, some hitting the ground while others huddle in hideouts like tliev do in their shelters at home. “Life is distorted for them. They don’t know what the reality around them is any more.'' With as manv as 130 distinct religious, ideo logical and social groups, many with widely differing visions of the Lebanon thev are fighting for, the voting generation has grown up with a sharp sense of alienation. “This is a verv serious problem for voting people,” said Dr. Samir Khalaf of the Ameri can University of Beirut. “How do vou expect to reintegrate youth into a society they can’t identify with, a society thev can’t understand; more importantly a so ciety they don't know?” Like everything else in Lebanon, the young generation is divided. The Green Line that separates Beirut into mutually hostile Christian and Moslem camps separates the young as well. Before the war people on both sides mingled all the time. Now the young go to separate schools. The history books they read give different ver sions of the past and the centuries-old feud ing that lias kept their communities apart. According to Khalaf, the war has forced people increasingly into what he calls “bub bles,” to the extent that families, rather than communities, have become the key social grouping. This, he argues, limits youngsters’ outlooks and comprehensions of the world as they are squeezed into ever-diminishing social contact, even among people of their own religion, class or sect. “What do you say to a 3-year-old child who asks you why Christians and Moslems can’t live together?" Khalife lamented. “Their childhood has been hijacked,” said Professor Laila Farhood, a mental health spe cialist at American University- Lebanon’s teen-agers and young people in their 20s have spent the past 10 years “witnes sing a catalogue of horror,” Khalaf observed. He said most Lebanese have gone into a chronic state of mourning, “be it for losing friends, family, property, opportunities or wasted years.” . “But the most painful of all,” he said, “are those grieving the loss of a way of life that may never be restored.” Unlike voting girls elsewhere, where main preoccupations are the latest hairstyles or See Beirut’s, page 12