liEidi ? toUilil Battalion Vol.82 Mo. 102 GSPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, February 19,1987 iy of i ftnditiijJ Irise,' )Qds a.] qj icultlo^ imall [« Senate panel votes to halt Contra funds t reasure's supporters expect Reagan veto ient tin other. nloo__ ASHINGTON (AP) — The Jautodsenate Foreign Relations Committee as veiHed 11-9 Wednesday to halt U.S. aid to Nicaragua’s anti-government neetfalHgi^rrillas in the First major test of capaotejse|timent in the new Congress to ward the Contras, i, DAr.r"' xorariir measure ve nc -cofetrolle lev couHiwii be vetoed by President Reagan if praetii iit eventually passes the Senate and rar.L. the House. UtaofuHl think we have the votes on the nger trfloor to pass it, but of course the FRA. President will veto it and I doubt thar we can override the veto,” said |. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., chair- t, of the panel and an opponent of Contra aid. No action by the full Hate is likely for several weeks, he 75' said. m. H'he vote came after more than hanc three hours of debate, in which both ion wr:gf; choir rsdistr Dune, sides repeated their arguments fa voring or opposing the program. “This is one of the most crucial war-peace issues we will face,” said Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., a strong opponent of Contra aid. Sen. T erry Sanford, D-N.C., an other opponent, said Reagan is fol lowing “a very dangerous and likely unsuccessful policy.” However, Sen. Paul Trible, R-Va., noted that the Contras have just be gun receiving official U.S. help again after a two-year hiatus and said, “We ought to play this hand over the next year or so” and see if they can win. The program has been highly controversial ever since the Contras, with secret U.S. help, began fighting Nicaragua’s leftist government six years ago. Congress banned U.S. military aid for two years but narrowly reversed i Gort igeabli refemr«! lail S.C af the! is V A&M, UT cooperating in effort to establish joint marine institute By Melanie Perkins Staff Writer k, e in tliat raoooi Aienas Derceni :ountiy and iB idacci- ;ty as a ful and Hask forces are being appointed to study the possibility of a joint ma rine science research institute and doejk and ship support operations in Galveston. Hhe institute could enhance coop- Ipion between Texas A&M and the University of Texas, maximize the Hof existing resources and possi- blypave the state some money, pftt its Jan. 26 meeting, the Texas A&{M Board of Regents discussed joiijjt developments between the two universities in the areas of marine sdehces and oceanography. Dr. William H. Mobley, A&M deputy chancellor for academic and i^fturce development, said several preliminary plans and options al ready have been developed. I One task force will study a joint docking proposal, he said, and a sec ond will begin looking at a wider ;inge of research and cooperative efforts between A&M and UT in a variety of ocean and marine areas. ! The task forces will be working through the spring and probably will have some recommendations by summer, Mobley said. Essentially, what we have now is jBmgreement to study cooperative ly,” Mobley said. “None of the detail nas been worked out. The only tan- gible thing is that there have been several specific dock design options identified.” A&M’s ship operations now are headquartered at Texas A&M at Galveston’s Mitchell Campus on Pel ican Island, while UT’s operations are based at its medical branch in Galveston. Mobley said both A&M and UT have the opportunity to expand and strengthen themselves in the areas of marine and oceanography facili ties. “The Select Committee on Higher Education concluded that since A&M and UT were both engaged in ocean and marine kinds of activites,” he said, “there might be some op portunity for cooperation, coordina tion — and thus, cost savings.” A joint venture in this area also would allow the two universities to compete more effectively for federal grants and major research contracts, Mobley said. Gen. Wesley F. Peel, A&M vice chancellor for facilities planning and construction, said UT first asked A&M to look into extending and sharing its dock facilities on Pelican Island. The idea is feasible, Peel said, but how much dock space will be needed is a matter of economic^ and detail. Both school’s boards will have to agree, he said. itself last fall and voted for $ 100 mil lion worth of aid, including $70 mil lion in military help, for the current fiscal year. Much of the money already has been committed by the administra tion, but the final $40 million cannot be spent until Reagan sends Con gress a report saying the aid is needed and the Contras are making progress. Congress could vote to block the expenditure, but Reagan could veto any such disapproval and it would take a two-thirds majority in each chamber to overturn his veto. The bill sent to the floor Wednes day would not specifically block the $40 million. It has no cut-off figure or date in it. The measure simply would ban U.S. help for the Contras, and Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., one of the sponsors, said if it eventually be comes law, it would halt whatever part of the $100 million package had not been spent. A similar cut-off bill has been in troduced in the House. House Majority Leader Thomas S. Foley, D-Wash., said Wednesday there is no question that Reagan will win the remaining $40 million be cause there is no chance that oppo nents will have enough votes to over ride a presidential veto. But Foley told reporters that Rea gan’s anticipated request for $105 million in new Contra aid “is in grave trouble.” He spoke after attending a con gressional meeting with Reagan at the White House. Spreading The Word — Shawn Garza, a sophomore chemical engineering ment. Members of the Baptist Student Union gave major, hands out a new version of the New Testa- away about 12,000 of the books Wednesday. Official: Co-op is state's best chance Center tries to land supercollider By Christi Daugherty Staff Writer The superconducting supercol lider is probably the greatest re search coup a state could get today, and if any group is going to get it for Texas, it probably will be the Hous ton Area Research Center, a HARC official said. Located in The Woodlands north of Houston, HARC is a cooperative formed by four Texas universities, countless businesses and the federal government. The four universities involved with HARC include Texas A&M, the University of Texas, the University of Houston and Rice University. Dr. Jane Armstrong, vice presi dent for program development at HARC, said HARC’s objective is to combine the resources and knowl edge of Texas universities funds from Texas businesses. with This combination should develop new technologies that will address the research needs of the private sec tor. HARC hopes to land the super collider project for Texas, she said, but whether or not it does, the cen ter will continue to grow. Originally incorporated in 1980, the center was the brainchild of Houston real estate developer George P. Mitchell, who said he stumbled onto the idea after reading about research conducted through major universities at similar centers in other states. “We just felt such a thing would be feasible here, so we convinced the boards of the four universities,” Mitchell said. Mitchell picked the Houston loca tion because 31 percent of the state’s income is generated in that area, he said. ■ > Each university appoints four members of its faculty to HARC’s 29-member board of directors, and this board decides which projects will be pursued. A&M has close ties to the center, including HARC’s president, Dr. W. Arthur Porter, who has served as di rector of A&M’s Texas Engineering Experiment Station. Another link is the center’s re cently acquired supercomputer. A&M and the other universities in HARC have relatively free access to the computer, which currently re mains in the testing stage. The $20 million computer is the first supercomputer produced by Ja pan and the only one of its kind in the Western Hemisphere, Arm strong said. Because of its size and speed, it is considered to be the best research computer in existence. The computer is so immense that it will take up over 16,000 square feet in HARC’s new research facility, which is under construction. Dr. John Dinkle, A&M associate provost for computing, said A&M is using the computer heavily for re search in areas such as molecular modeling, meteorology and business computations. Meanwhile, HARC, like organiza tions from 44 other states, is pursu ing the multibillion-dollar supercol lider, hungry for the prestige and See HARC, page 11 3UghtlO eworU nee you recoin- teachers join forces to request raise A&M dean: Texas groups chose wrong time for proposal inner imore , Since i easier isasew* •cuiive ionf ufl1 ' By Daniel A. La Bry Staff Writer l Texas teacher organizations fi nally got their act together on Feb. 9 by making a joint proposal toVtlie 70th session of the State Legislature for a minimum salary increase — the groups just picked the wrong time to do it, said Bryan Cole, an associate dean in 1 Texas A&M’s College of Educa tion. »‘With the economic situation the way it is and the other de- |fflands on the state resources, I would seriously doubt they (tea chers) would receive that kind of an increase as a state minimum,” Cole said. Hfhe Texas State Teachers As- jSOciation, Association of Texas Professional Educators, Texas Classroom Teachers Association and Texas Federation of Teach ers — which have separate legis lative programs — banded to gether to make one unified proposal for a statewide mini mum salary increase of $2,900 over the next two years. jeri Stone, TCTA executive di rector, said the four groups wanted to send a clear message to the Legislature that future sala ries were a priority for all four groups and that the groups had a single and unified stand on the is sue. jlTrhe proposal calls for increas ing starting salaries from the cur rent minimum of $15,200 to $17,080 for the first year and to $18,100 for the 1988-89 school year. The $15,200 minimum sal ary was set in House Bill 72 by the Legislature during the 1984 spe cial session. Stone said the proposal would increase the salaries of current teachers as well as those entering the profession in the future. wanted to avoid sending a mixed message to the Legislature. We didn’t want to have four propo sals out there floating around.” Cole said the presentation of different proposals to the Legis lature hurt the teacher groups in 1984 during the consideration of House Bill 72. “No question about that,” he said. “One of the things that hurt “With the economic situation the way it is ... I would seriously doubt they (teachers) would receive that kind of an increase as a state minimum.” — Bryan Cole, associate dean in A&M College of Edu cation. The four groups based their pay requests on the 1983 findings of the Select Committee on Public Education, which recommended starting salaries of $17,080, she said. Cole said he believes the in crease is justified, but said the present economic condition in Texas will seriously hinder the proposal’s chance for success. Stone said, “I think the present economic situation is going to af fect the consideration of any bill that requires any type of expendi tures— and probably negatively. “But that was one of the rea sons the four teacher groups them during the discussion of House Bill 72 was that all the tea chers groups could not agree. “It finally got to the point where many of the legislators just quit listening to any of them (the groups) because they were con tradicting each other.” Stone said House Bill 72 in creased the teacher salary sched ule, but it increased entry-level salaries considerably more than career salaries. “Traditionally we’ve had a problem within the teaching pro fession,” Stone said. “Virtually ev erybody who is going to leave the profession leaves within the first five years, and we lose an incred ibly high percentage of beginning teachers within those early years.” She said an increase in career salaries, as well as beginning sala ries, is needed to attract — and keep — qualified teachers. Cole said most of the students he has dealt with are more con cerned with the working environ ment than the salary. “While the money is impor tant,” Cole said, “most students are worried about the conditions of the classroom setting and the conditions being positive in which a good learning experience can take place.” Since most A&M education { graduates are being hired by the arger districts, salaries aren’t a real problem. Cole said. “In almost all the suburban areas — Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and so forth — the start ing salaries are in the $17,000 to $18,000 range,” he said. The concern over teaching sal aries hasn’t been a real problem as far as enrollment in the col lege, he said. A&M had the fastest enrollment growth of any college of education in the country two years ago. Recently, enrollment in the col lege has reached a plateau, but Cole said he expects enrollment to increase again in the fall. UH budget committee proposes elimination of 3 school programs HOUSTON (AP) — Three aca demic programs have been targeted for termination by a University of Houston advisory budget committee that also wants to cut five other areas to fund research during difficult economic times. The 24-member advisory commit tee recommended scrapping the siz able College of Technology, along with the recreation program in the education college and the depart ment of human development and consumer science in the social sci ences college. Cutbacks were suggested in the architecture college, music school, sociology department, communica tion school and graduate school of social work, according to a draft re port issued Tuesday. About 1,500 students are enrolled in the technology college, which pro vides trained workers to the engi neering, computer electronics and construction fields. It employs 40 full-time faculty members. Lawrence Wolf, dean of the te- chonology college, called the pro posed cuts “insensitive and incor rect.” “I think the primary issue is whether a public university will pro vide opportunities only for those who seek to be the privileged or elite or will include education for those who do much of the essential work in our society,” Wolf said. The budget advisory council — which includes faculty, student and staff members — wants comments on its draft report by mid-March. President Richard Van Horn said he will use the final report in devel oping next year’s budget. He de clined comment on the specific rec ommendations. “When you have limited funds, you have to decide where to put them,” he said. Ira Shepard, a law professor who chaired the council, said its recom mendations are based on the prem ise that another round of across-the- board cutbacks is “totally undesira ble.” “You eliminate some programs to keep the strength and momentum in other programs,” Shepard said. According to the report, the uni versity’s “primary mission is to be a national comprehensive research university.” epa mate the cost savings of the cuts be cause it is hard to judge how many students the university might fail to attract without them. The council’s proposal would allow current majors to complete their programs. The report said affected faculty should be placed elsewhere in the university, if possible.