rs ire lll e worldv ? Vtil.82 No. 121 USPS 045360 14 pages irthqualej - of lives,,® line carryii). I'ich proud, wernmenii. The Battalion College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 25, 1987 lrm g quest J reporten l °n to Prjl cern ing tiif f Iranian official: Attack bn Gulf would hurt U.S. ^Speaker offers aid in hostage negotiations IUUoIBnicOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — The , /M speaker of Iran’s Parliament said OT IS ■resday that Americans around the world would be in danger if the ives attenc- exas Daily on with pi tapers' pad se in then« )ii(l inapp: with toiitj id newspape itain their, ig the deds newspaper j| erating i rial, aheti id. United States launches an attack in the Persian Gulf, where U.S. Navy 1 fpin-s have been strengthened. HHashemi Rafsanjani also renewed *n’s offer to intervene with pro- Hmian Shiite Moslem kidnappers in Hbanon for the release of Ameri cans if Washington returns an esti mated $5 billion in Iranian assets frozen in 1979. He did not link the threat and the offer, both of which were made in an interview with Tehran radio that was monitored in Nicosia. The United States says Iran has deployed anti-ship missiles in the Strait of Hormuz, the 40-mile-wide southern gateway to the Persian Gulf through which 20 percent of the non-communist world’s oil passes. Local businessman, 4 others charged in 1984 bombing By Olivier Uyttebrouck Senior Staff Writer H Local night club and restaurant owner Athanasios G. “Tommy” Dal- Kand four other men were indicted i by a federal grand jury Monday in ^■mnection with the 1984 bombing of Graham Central Station, a coun- | try western night club in Bryan. (■ The four-count indictment names rBallis and four other men, Steve flHuane Graham of Houston, broth- bws William Hershel Nash and Timo- tliy Joe Nash of Lubbock and Phillip liBmpson of Lubbock, ifl All are charged with conspiracy to nHomb a building, which carries a Miaxirnum of five years in prison and bII $19,000 fine. The indictment also ■ames William Nash for malicious iHestruction of a building and unlaw- j fulIv making a firearm, each with a qBiaximum penalty of 10 years in designee Brison and a $ 10,000 fine. The other burden til tour are charged with aiding Nash in theeconor 1 these crimes. e. The iged whi e has r »f the tax omy rsm and gas- ne based Formatioi rora Bui not expe rom inde Proffni In addition, William Nash is charged with making a false statement to a grand jury on Oct. 11, 1985. Nash told the jury he had never worked with explosives, U.S. Attorney Albert Ratliff of Houston said. A sixth man, Danny Lee Webb, who according to the indictment met with Dallis and Graham in August 1984 and helped arrange the bomb ing, is named as a “unindicted co conspirator.” Ratliff, who declined to elaborate on Webb’s role in the in vestigation, said Webb has not been charged with a crime but is “involved with the investigation.” Officials with the Bureau of Alco hol, Tobacco and Firearms in Hous ton, the agency investigating the bombing, declined comment on the case Tuesday. The indictment charges that Wil liam Nash entered the back door of See Bombing, page 14 This has revived fears that the Iranians will close the strait. The United States has vowed to preserve free navigation in the gulf, which has been a battleground since the Iran-Iraq war began in September 1980. “The events of Lebanon could be repeated for the Americans around the world” if the United States at tacks, Rafsanjani said. “If, God for bid, such a thing takes place, Ameri cans will be unsafe throughout the world.” “Of course, we don’t want this to happen. We’re not making threats, but we are warning the American people to tie the hands of their lead ers.” By “the events of Lebanon,” Raf sanjani appeared to be referring to the 1983 suicide bombings of the U.S. Embassy and Marine headquar ters in Beirut, in which more than 300 people were killed, and to the abductions of Americans. Eight Americans are among the 24 foreigners missing in Lebanon and presumed held by Moslem kid nappers. Most are believed to be captives of extremist Shiite groups backed by Iran. Defense Secretary Caspar Wein berger said Sunday the United States will protect oil tankers against Iranian attack and is making contin gency plans for military action. British, French and Soviet warships also patrol the Persian Gulf area. Iran has attacked neutral ships in the gulf in retaliation for Iraqi at tacks on its tankers, oil fields and pe troleum export terminals. Lloyds of London’s Intelligence Unit reported that Iraqi warplanes attacked the Iranian tanker Dena in the northern gulf Monday. Wheel People Peter Glenn, left, a junior psychology major, cycles around with Pete McDonald, a senior electrical en- Photo by Tracy Staton gineering major, at the meeting of the TAMU One-Wheelers Club Tuesday evening. -^Aggie’s dad helps student stranded in Mexican airport i By Anthony Wilson Reporter I All Aggies have heard stories of Bther Aggies being in bleak situa- I ions with no hope in sight. The ; story usually starts out with some 1 poor Ag in desperate need of help. ■ As the Aggie’s world is crumbling laround him, others just pass by with- |out a second thought, but then the [ story ends with a lone defender of ; humanity and Aggie good will Barging in like John Wayne and the phvalry to save the day. E For Jonette Anderson, that story , came true over Spring Break 1987. I Anderson, a sophomore general studies major from Arlington, was enjoying spring break with 12 other > A&M students in Ixtapa, Mexico. Everything was well and Anderson said she was “having a blast” until someone stole her plane ticket for her return trip to Houston. I “As soon as I found that out,” An derson said, “I told security at the ■ hotel. They said, ‘We’ll be looking for it, but otherwise, when you go to the airport Friday morning, you can just get another one.’ I thought they > Could just punch it in the computer and give me another one.” I On Friday morning, Anderson and her friends went to the airport in Ixtapa to fly to Mexico City. Be cause they had flown on a different airline to Mexico City, Anderson I couldn’t get a refund or a new ticket. She didn’t have any money, so she S bought a ticket using a friend’s Credit card. :> Once in Mexico City, Anderson’s friends had to board their 1:15 p.m. flight. 1 “I told them, ‘Y’all just go ahead and go and I’ll just catch the next plight,’ ” Anderson said. “The next pight to Houston was at about 6 ■clock. After they left, I went up to the lady at Continental.” I The language barrier that came with being in Mexico presented an other problem for Anderson. E “I can’t speak any Spanish at all,” she said. “And they were totally Spanish-speaking people. It was really hard for them to understand what I was saying. E “I explained to them as well as I could that my plane ticket had been stolen and I wanted to get another one, so she looked it up on the com puter and said, ‘OK, it’ll be $140.’ I said, ‘Well, I don’t have any money.’ I had no money, no credit card, no nothing.” Jonette Anderson The airline told Anderson she would have to get her refund in Houston and she wouldn’t be able to board a plane without a ticket that had been paid for. “I was begging her and she just said, ‘No dinero, no ticket,’ ” Ander son said. Anderson asked strangers to talk to the lady at the ticket counter, but nothing helped. “I was totally desperate, so I thought I would call my parents,” Anderson said. But she was not allowed to call col lect from the airport and a call home cost $15. “I just started crying,” Anderson said. “I was so upset. I had no other alternative. Nobody had any sympa thy for me. Everybody was just looking funny at me. I was just stuck.” Anderson said a tall businessman in a suit walked up to her and asked if she was an American and what the problem was. She said she told him what was wrong and he told her he was from Houston. He then hap pened to mention that his son at tends Texas A&M. “I just freaked out,” Anderson said. “I said, T go to Texas A&M! I can’t believe that!’ He said, ‘You’re an Aggie? I’m going to help you get back to Texas.’ ” The man introduced himself as Paul Crozier and said he would buy Anderson a plane ticket home. An derson had to wait a while before tickets went on sale and Crozier had to catch a plane, so he gave her money for a ticket, $50 extra for any other problems and his address. See Stranded, page 14 Task force to study savings and loan industry AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Bill Clements said Tuesday he is appointing a special task force to seek solutions to problems in the troubled Texas savings and loan industry. “Our Texas savings and loans are in a critical financial condition,” Clements said. “There’s no question about that. “So what I’m trying to do is bring from the pri vate sector some very knowledgeable people who can assist us in coming up with some answers as to what we might do.” The governor named Bayard Friedman, 60, to head the new task force. He said about a dozen other people will be appointed to the panel in the near future. Friedman is a former mayor of Fort Worth, former chairman of the Fort Worth district of the Interfirst Corp. and former chairman of the board of the Texas American Bank, said Reggie Bashur, the governor’s press secretary. Clements said the task force, when completed, will be seeking ways to ease problems facing the savings and loan industry, which he said is suffer ing from distressed economic conditions. “This is a serious problem,” Clements told his weekly news conference. “It will have a real im pact on our economic recovery here in Texas.” Clements said that due in part to changes in federal regulations and in part to the state’s re cent population boom, Texas savings and loans have undergone considerable growth. “Their problems are, for the most part, related to real estate loans,” the governor said. He said he would ask the task force to find ave nues in which the state could cooperate with the federal government and Congress to improve savings and loan conditions. Although a number of banks have failed in Texas in recent months, Clements said his new task force would deal only with savings and loans. Some unresolved issues remain after final OK Core curriculum debate nears end By Amy Couvillon Staff Writer Texas A&M President Frank E. Vandiver’s final approval of the con troversial core curriculum proposal on March 13 has inspired sighs of re lief from those involved in its 3-year- old debate, but some issues remain unresolved. The curriculum will take effect in Fall 1988 for all undergraduate stu dents entering A&M. It involves new entrance requirements as well as 48 hours of required college-level courses. “I was delighted to see it finally become reality,” said Dr. Paul Par rish, an English professor who spon sored the original Faculty Senate core curriculum resolution in 1983. But Dr. Ronald Darby, professor of chemical engineering, worries that the curriculum will add too many hours to the chemical engi neering degree plan, which he said is constrained by rigid accreditation requirements. “I don’t object in philosophy to the core curriculum,” Darby said. “I think it’s justified . . . but the chemi cal engineering curriculum will probably be strained.” In a March 13 letter to Dr. Sam Black, Faculty Senate speaker, the president congratulated the Senate’s hard work on the core curriculum proposal and, with a few exceptions, approved the Senate’s version of the plan. Vandiver took out one require ment for all students to complete a course in technology and renewable resourses, calling it too vague. Black said the executive commit tee will decide how to make the item more specific at its April 1 meeting. Dr. Don Russell, an electrical en gineering associate professor who proposed the technology section along with Dr. Tom Kozik, ex plained the motivation behind the proposal and said he would be will ing to help amend it to meet Vandiv er’s approval. “Our real intent was to try to ex pose the people in non-technical rograms to technological issues and elp them learn to appreciate how those issues affect them,” Russell said. “We hope that still can be done in some fashion, and if asked to, I would serve on such a group (a com mittee to suggest specific courses).” The Senate had recommended creating a special subcommittee to help implement the core curric ulum, but Vandiver’s approval letter did not refer to this. Black said. “Dr. Vandiver did not address it, so that’s one part of the proposal that is in limbo currently,” he said. Vandiver is out of town and none of his spokesmen could be reached Tuesday for comment. Assistant Provost Lawrence Cress, who headed a committee last fall to study the impact of the core curric ulum on A&M’s various colleges, said that the core will not greatly dis rupt A&M because many of its re quirements will be absorbed into cur rent degree plans. “The core curriculum will have very little overall fiscal or curricular impact on the University,” Cress said. “There may be a little less flexi bility, but the deans expected very little net gain or loss in student credit hours.” The impact study’s Nov. 17 report said that four of A&M’s 10 colleges — business administration, educa tion, architecture and engineering — expect to add credit hours to their graduation requirements. The Col lege of Engineering’s anticipated ad dition, a maximum of nine credit hours, was the highest estimate. In last April’s debate, several members of the Faculty Senate ex pressed worries that the lengthy core eliminates electives'for engineering students and could delay gradua tions. Darby, a chemical engineering professor, explained his concerns about the addition of hours, saying the department of chemical engi neering must meet extra accredita tion requirements from the Ameri can Institute of Chemical Engineers. Because of this, Darby said, the de partment is less flexible. “We could do it (implement the core curriculum) without adding hours,” he said, “but we would have zero flexibility in the degree plan and no free electives at all.” Russell said he doesn’t think the core curriculum will force engineers to take more years to graduate. “It will cause some reorientation of the degree plans,” he said, “and possibly some increase in the flexibil ity of the degree plans.” Darby suggested that the state re quirement for 12 hours of political science and history is outmoded. “(This requirement) in addition to the cultural heritage and social sci ence requirements is ‘double-kill’ in a way,” he said. The impact study report en dorsed the Faculty Senate’s recom mendation that these state require ments be reconsidered. “The core’s cultural heritage and social science requirements, while not addressing the particular issues that motivated the Texas Legislature 30 years ago, serve the broader goal of acquainting our students with the nature and origins of our society,” the report read. Curriculum Requirements Entrance requirements If these are not met upon en trance, the student will be re quired to fill them with college- level courses. • At least one high-school course in computer science or demonstrated proficiency. • Two years of foreign lan guage in high school or demon strated proficiency. Core Requirements No course can he counted twice by a student in satisfaction of these various requirements. • Six hours of speech and writing skills, including ENGL 104 and one of the following: ENGL 203, 210, 212, 221, 222, 227, 228, 231, 232, 301, 325, 341 or SCOM 103, 243, 403, 404. • Six hours of mathematical or logical reasoning {at least three in math) to be selected from MATH 166 or any higher math course and PHIL 240, 341,342. • Eight hours of science with at least one corresponding labo ratory. Acceptable courses in clude: BIOL 101, 107, 113, 114; CHEM 10L 102; GENE 301, 310; GEOG 203; CEOL 101,106; METR 301; any PHYS 200 level course. • Six hours of cultural heri tage to be selected from fine arts, humanities, foreign language (ex cluding skills courses in native language), history, literature, phi losophy, archaeology, geography and theater arts, • Six hours of social science to be selected from cultural anthro pology, geography, political sci ence, psychology, sociology, ap plied ethics and economics. • Four hours of physical edu cation. • Twelve hours of citizenship, including six hours of political science and six hours of history.