I Texas ASM gg V # The Battalion 83 No. 99 USPS 075360 12 pages College Station, Texas Monday, February 17, 1986 nalysts ly U.S. conomy oking up Associated Press WASHINGTON — While falling (prices are diminishing revenues Tthe state of Texas, many econo- jts believe that these falling oil les will bolster the U.S. economy. The country should enjoy signifi- tly better growth this year than in 3, many analysts believe, the new optimism represents a rp turnaround from expectations :more than a month ago. At that b, many analysts felt the economy jild muddle through the new year ph as it did last year, with sluggish vth and a stagnant unemploy- !ht level. owever, plunging world oil es have altered that view. In the month, oil prices on the spot ket have fallen by one-third, ipping from $25 per barrel to jnd SI7 per barrel, luch a precipitous decline could [)ell trouble for countries such as lexico, which depend on oil reve- lues to finance their heavy debt, but Ts likely to be good news for most toiericans. Jhe beneficial impact of falling oil ptes will be felt in two ways, econo- |ts believe. S. output will rise because con- ers and businesses will have e to spend on other items, since r oil bills will be less, and infla- in this country will be lower. (Vharton Econometrics, a private casting firm which in December forecasting that the economy (opld grow 3 percent this year, is low predicting growth of 3.7 per- It. that is sharply higher than the teak 2.5 percent growth turned in [uring 1985 and is not far from the teagan administration’s optimistic ■diction that the economy will See Economists, page 12 7 - s -f -My « Mm . 5 -i Aquino ask Filipinos to resist Marcos’ win Associated Press MANILA, Philippines — Corazon Aquino called Sunday for non-vio lent protests against newly re-elected President Ferdinand E. Marcos, who declared, “I am the president. They are not going to drive me out.” Marcos, president for 20 years, also announced Sunday the resigna tion of his most powerful military commander, Gen. Fabian C. Ver. A day after the National Assembly declared Marcos winner of an elec tion marked by charges of fraud and terrorism, more than half a million Filipinos joined his opponent in a downtown park rally — a much big ger rally than any that had gathered in the campaign leading to the Feb. 7 presidential election. Aquino called for strikes and school shutdowns on the day after Marcos’ Feb. 26 inauguration for a new six-year term, and urged a boy cott of banks and newspapers owned by Marcos’ “cronies.” Aquino, who had vowed to lead daily demonstrations if she was cheated at the polls, also called on the military and police to disobey or ders that were “unjust.” “Although unarmed, I feel like the young boy David prepared to face the giant Goliath,” she said. “If Goliath refuses to yield, we shall es calate our non-violent struggle.” In a news conference at the presi dential palace, Marcos again rejected charges he won through fraud and said he would not step down. Marcos also announced that Ver, the armed forces chief, had re signed, and he had accepted the res ignation. But he said Ver would re main available as a consultant. Constabulary Chief Lt. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos was appointed interim chief of staff, Marcos said. Ver, 66, was charged in the Au gust 1983 assassination of Aquino’s husband, opposition leader Benigno Aquino. But a court later acquitted him, 24 other military men and one civilian also accused in the murder. Ver’s resignation was announced a day before Marcos, Aquino, and other Filipino leaders were to meet with Philip Habib, a special envoy sent by President Reagan to observe the aftermath of the divisive elec- “I am convinced that if there was any fraud, it may have been com mitted by the lower levels and was not authorized by the upper lead ership,” Marcos said. Asked to comment on Reagan’s statement that his victory over Aquino was marked by fraud, Mar cos said Reagan “has been wrongly informed, and I intend to see to it that the correct information reaches him.” Soviet sailor missing in ship wreck Photo by TOM OWNBEY Smooth Landing Mark Gardner, president of the Parachuting Club at Texas A&M, drops in on the Ormond R. Simpson Drill Field as part of a mem bership drive and just for the fun of it. Associated Press WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A Soviet cruise ship carrying more than 700 passengers and crew struck rocks and sank in stormy seas Sun day, but only one person, a Soviet sailor, is missing and presumed drowned, officials reported. Chief Police Inspector Owen Dowse, in a mid-morning announce ment Monday on Radio New Zea land, said one crewman was missing but all of the others aboard the 20,000-ton Mikhail Lermontov had been rescued. The passengers, many of them el derly Australians and New Zea landers, were taken from lifeboats aboard rescue craft and brought to Wellington, 35 miles across Cook Strait from Port Gore where the liner sank. Ten people were hospitalized with minor injuries, Dowse said. Search coordinator Barry James said the Mikhail Lermontov had about 400 passengers and some 300 Soviet crew members. But the chairman of the Marlbo rough Harbor Board, Bruno Del- iessi, said the ship carried a total of 841 passengers and crew. Survivors said in Wellington that passengers and crew began fleeing the 20,000-ton liner in lifeboats about 1V2 hours after it began taking on water and hours before it sank just before 11 p.m. Sunday. Efforts to rescue the people from the lifeboats were hampered by darkness, driving rain and 15 mph winds. A New Zealand air force recon naissance plane and helicopter and police and navy patrol boats re sumed the search for survivors Mon day. The 580-foot Mikhail Lermontov, registered in Leningrad, spends the winter cruising between Australia and the South Pacific islands, with stops in New Zealand. It left Picton on New Zealand’s South Island Sunday morning and was heading north in the scenic Marlborough Sounds area when it struck rocks, knocking a hole in the hull and disabling the engines, according to the New Zealand Search and Rescue Service. The liner, with a 12-degree list, drifted into harbor at Port Gore. The captain tried to beach it there, but rescue officials said the ship drifted back off shore and sank in about 100 feet of water. Prince's 2nd visit to Texas will be busy Associated Press DALLAS — From the world’s big- tcake to the big cheeses in Texas itics and entertainment, Britain’s nee Charles has a packed menu king his second visit to the Lone State. iis Royal Highness is scheduled irrive here today for a five-day that will include high-tech tours, exas-sized cake-cutting ceremony 1 lavish banquets designed to kick I the celebration of the state’s )th birthday. tate and local leaders have been king feverishly for the last four nths to map out the visit that was Britain’s Charles starting Texas tour prompted by Dallas billionaire and computer magnate H. Ross Perot. Prince Charles had planned to come to Dallas to give Perot the Winston Churchill award — only the third presented in honor of those who epitomize Churchill’s spirit — but the state’s Sesquicentennial cele bration piqued his interest. Sam Garner, head of the Texas Sesquicentennial Commission, said, “The more he asked about the Ses quicentennial, the more interested he got. So he decided to see a lot more of the state.” The prince’s crowded itinerary begins in Dallas, where he will pre sent the Churchill award Tuesday night, and includes stopovers in Houston and Austin before he jets to Palm Springs, Calif., from San Anto nio Friday. British Consulate spokeswoman Linda Kelly says Prince Charles, traveling without Princess Diana, will be greeted at the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport Mon day night by Gov. Mark White and a bevy of local dignitaries. The next day, he will tour the Electra Communications Corp. and Electronic Data Systems, a company Perot founded. He’ll also see Dallas’ Infomart, a high-tech information center whose design echoes the famous Crystal Palace in London. From there, it’s on to Houston Wednesday for a tour of Shell Oil Co.’s Deer Park refinery and the San Jacinto Monument, which commem orates Texas’ independence from Mexico. Kelly says he’ll also visit Mount- batten House, a retirement home fi nanced by the Daughters of the Brit ish Empire and named after the prince’s late great uncle, before din ing that night with Houston Mayor Kathy Whitmire. The big Sesquicentennial bash, See Prince, page 12 Generator shutdown darkens part of A&M By BRIAN PEARSON Senior Staff Writer Several buildings at Texas A&M blacked out Sunday night when power failed due to an au tomatic shutdown in one of two generators then operating at the Physical Plant, Harold Ploch, Physical Plant operator, said Sun day. Ploch said a momentary loss of oil pressure occurred as workers were changing a generator oil cooler, causing the machine to shut down. Ploch said plant workers had to shut off electricity from 9 p.m. to about 9:15 p.m. to 15 buildings to prevent an overload of power from the tie line coming from the utilities plant in Bryan. When a campus generator shuts down, power from the tie line automat ically increases to compensate, Ploch said. He said that two campus feeder lines, which bring electric ity to the 15 buildings, had to be turned off to prevent the over load on the Bryan tie line. Buildings affected by the blackout included the Sterling C. Evans Library, the Academic Building and the Reed McDonald Building. SCONA speaker: U.S. neglecting Mideast conflict By JEANNE ISENBERG Staff Writer Americans need to challenge the re- itly adopted attitude of “benign neglect” en toward helping the Middle East at- 1 peace, Dr. William B. Quandt said Sat- lay in his closing speech of the 31st an ti Student Conference on National airs. Peace in the Middle East is never going )e made by committee, by consensus or the faint-hearted,” he said. “It’s a rthy goal, and there are many people in region who will fight hard for it, but yneed some help.” Quandt, a senior fellow in the Foreign icy Studies program at the Brookings titution in Washington, said the Middle t has always been of interest to the ited States. t’s a very heavily armed part of the itld, he said, and the only part of the rd World with nuclear weapons. Iso, more than one-third of the United States’ foreign aid goes to the Middle East, he said, mostly to Egypt and Israel. The reason the Middle East stays upper most in the minds of U.S. presidents, Quandt said, is that this is the only part of the Third World where the United States could come into direct confrontation with the Soviet Union because of commitments to conflicting sides. “In 1967, 1970, 1972 and 1982, the United States and the Soviet Union reacted to Middle Eastern crises with their own mil itary forces,” Quandt said. “In the end, they didn’t send forces or come into con flict. But in a nuclear era, anytime a super power begins to think about deploying its own military forces to an area, we have to be concerned about the consequences.” The United States has other reasons to stay involved in the Middle East, Quandt said, especially with the special relationship it has developed with Israel because of the commitment of the U.S. Jewish community and recently the commitment of the Chris tian fundamentalists. Also see: Israeli, Arab call for peace, page 5 Interdependent world changes, page 5 The United States is seen by the Middle East as a strong element in Israel’s strength, he said, and the actions of Israel are usually identified with the United States. But the United States also has a big in terest in the Arab world, he said. “At any given moment,” Quandt said, “we have been eager to pursue some relationship with groups of Arab countries — either for strategic reasons, for oil rea sons or for political reasons. And there’s al ways been an undercurrent of tension be tween these two interests.” Promoting a peaceful resolution to the Arab-Israeli conflict logically would be to the best interest of the United States, Quandt said, but since 1979, nothing of lasting importance has been achieved through U.S. mediation. “What we have to look back on is a pe riod of peacemaking that produced one big success — the Egyptian-Israeli peace trea ty,” Quandt said, “and nothing since. “That achievement is in some jeopardy now because of our lack of follow-through and the failure to broaden the peace pro cess.” Instead of accelerating U.S. support, though, foreign aid may decrease as a re sult of the Gramm-Rudman law, which forces Congress to cut a certain amount from the federal budget every year, he said. Though U.S. mediation is something that should be continued, he said, there is a possibility for the Middle East to achieve peace on its own. Quandt said the head of the Israeli gov ernment at least acknowledges the Palestin ian problem and doesn’t exclude the possi bility of territorial compromise. On the Arab side, he said, there is talk of a prospective negotiation between Israel and the right partners, whereas in Camp David, Egypt was placed in the wrong role as spokesman for the Palestinians. Although there are positive indicators toward peace, Quandt said, weak political leadership and political insecurity in Mid dle East regimes has prevented a set tlement. “These parties cannot, in my view, make peace on their own,” he said. “They need help. They need more than just a postman carrying messages between them. “What they cannot do is mobilize the po litical will to go to their own people and say, ‘We’re going to have to compromise on some very difficult points.’ To do that, they need to be able to say ‘We’ll get something for it. We’ll get peace, or security or sup port from the international community.’ Those justifications need to be put in place by some third party. “The United States could play a more ef fective role. But it has chosen not to.”