I Vol. 82 No. 154 GSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas The Umbrella Brigade Spectators attending final review on Saturday sported umbrellas of varying shapes anti sizes to protect themselves from the scorching sun Photo by Robert W. Rizzo and.sweltering humidity. Temperatures reached 82 degrees but the humidity was 51 percent, making the outdoors a bit unbearable. Faculty Senate elects officers, OKs plan for transferring credit By Lee Schexnaider Stufi Writer fhe Texas A&M Faculty Senate elected its of ficers and approved a resolution that would [change A&M’s treatment of transfer credit at its | meeting Monday afternoon. Dr, C. Richard Shurmvay, an agricultural eco- jnomics professor and Senate secretary, was [elected as the new speaker, defeating his oppo nent, Dr. Leonard I). Ponder, 43-34. Dr. B. Don Russell, an associate professor of [electrical engineering, was elected deputy speaker over Dr. John H. Wormuth of the Gol- [lege of Geosciences by a vote of 50 to 29. A&M’s Dr. (bu y E. Hart, professor of genetics [and soil and crop sciences, defeated Dr. Walter T. Buenger, associate professor of history, for the position of secretary-treasurer. Hart won by a [vote of 54 to 20. Senators elected to the Executive Committee [include Ponder; Wormuth; Buenger; Dr. Her- rnan ). Saatkamp, head of the humanities depart- ment; Peter S. Rose; finance professor and Dr. William H. Bassichis, associate professor of phys- lics. The Senate also approved a resolution chang- [ing the way transfer credit is handled at A&M. The resolution proposes to put transfer grades |on the same basis as courses taken at A&M on a satisfactory-unsastisfactory basis. A grade of C or higher would be needed in a course for it to transfer. Current University policy holds that students must have a passing grade in a class to transfer it from an accredited university and a minimum grade of C to transfer it from a non-accredited public college in Texas. “They are not being vigorous in their academic standards. . . . This is bad for A & M’s reputation. ” — Dr. Peter J. Hugill, academic af fairs committee chairman Dr. Peter J. Hugill, chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee, presented the resolution to the Senate. Hugill said the aim of the original resolution sent to Vandiver was to make sure courses that received a D at other institutions will not to be accepted as transfer credit. “President Vandiver returned (the resolution) to the Senate with the claim that (the policy) meant unfair treatment,” Hugill said. “We, as Academic Affairs Committee, looked back at that and realized that in the catalog it says that if you take work on a satifactory-unsatisfactory basis at Texas A&M University, you must get a grade of C or better to be counted as satisfactory. “In effect, the D is the same as an F — it counts as unsatisfactory. So we felt there was consider able discrepancy between our position and the president’s position. So we tried to find a com promise.” Hugill said the compromise was to ensure that transfer work would be credited according,to the same criteria as courses taken on a satisfactory- unsatisfactory basis. Hugill said Tuesday that the main concern of the bill is with grades from junior colleges. “Essentially, if you look at the grade point ra tio, it isn’t very good,” he said. “They are not be ing vigorous in their academic standards. We are not happy with those standards. Some classes at junior colleges have 50 percent A’s. This is bad for A&M’s reputation.” Another issue before the Senate was whether to discontinue the mining engineering and safety engineering degree programs. Memorandums from the engineering department cite low enroll ment as the justification for the programs’ with drawal. Dr. Brann Johnson, associate professor of ge ology and geophysics, said the mining engi neering program had been deleted from the University catalog before any official action was taken to discontinue it. Research assistant: A&M may benefit espite rejection of supercollider site Commission picks 2 areas to propose as project sites By Carolyn Garcia Senior Stuff Writer In die Texas race for the super conducting supercollider, Dallas and Amarillo crossed the finish line to gether, while Burleson County — Texas A&M’s runner — was left at the stai ting gate. Rather than a single site, a state commission decided Tuesday to choose two sites to offer Gov. Bill Clements. If Clements accepts the proposed sites, final proposals will be sent to the U.S. Department of Energy, which is expected to announce the §b billion atom smasher’s address in January 1989. The Texas National Research Laboratory Commission chose Dal las unanimously by a voice vote, but had to cast ballots to decide between Austin and Amarillo. The Burleson Countv site was eliminated Monday. In its quest to become a “world university,” Texas A&M University was looking to the supercollider pro ject as a way to add to its already [bulging research portfolio. John Millhollon, assistant for research park development, said that al though the enormous atom smasher [won’t be built in A&M’s back yard, the University still will benefit if the DOE chooses Texas to house the p reject. "It was really a disappointment,” Millhollon said. "It would have meant more to A&M if it were 30 miles away rather than 150, but we will still benefit from it. I am sure the [University will still support it. It [would have been better if it were AUS TIN (AP) — A state commis sion chose sites outside Dallas and Amarillo Tuesday to pitch as poten tial Texas homes for the lucrative “supercollider” project. The Texas National Research Laboratory Commission chose the site south of Dallas that rings Waxa- hachie by unanimous voice vote, but it had to take a ballot vote to decide between Austin and Amarillo for the second choice. “The Dallas proposal and the Austin proposal are very similar in my view',” commission chairman Peter Flawn said. “The Amarillo proposal, on the other hand, offers a different kind of site, a West Texas kind of site, if you will.” Steve Howerton, chairman of the Dallas-Fort Worth Superconducting Super Collider Authority, said, “We’re ecstatic. The site won on its technical merits.” Howerton said many “God-given things,” such as a major airport and the area’s amenities, led to commis sion’s top choice. The proposals are closer, but I don’t see support drop- ping because Of the locality.” Although the proposal for the lo cal site offered a lucrative incentives package — $591 million over 20 years — the site was rejected. The to be shipped to the U.S. Depart ment of Energy by Aug. 3. Earlier Tuesday, four of six fi nalists in statewide competition for the $6 billion atom-smashing project made their final bids before the commission. A debate in the Legislature over how many sites should be selected was settled Tuesday morning with a measure ordering the panel to choose at least two. The other fi nalists also agreed to rally behind those that were selected. The group proposing the site near Amarillo told commissioners to consider choosing “an attractive smaller city” instead of two big cities. “In the beginning God created this site for the SSC,” Amarillo Na tional Bank President Richard Ware said. Amarillo Mayor Glen Parkey said, “They may have concluded (that) to submit Austin and Dallas-Fort Worth would have been a single en try.” He added that Amarillo was aided by data it collected on its site’s geology and estimated costs. absence of a major airport, the pres ence of relatively poor geological conditions and potential problems with land acquisition contributed to the commission’s decision to elimi nate the Burleson County site from f rom the race. Wherever the giant facility, which will be the world’s largest and most powerful atom smasher, finally is built, the location will enjoy research and financial growth, Millhollon said. The facility, 52 miles in circum ference, will cost no less than $4.4 billion to build, will create approxi mately 2,500 permanent jobs and w'ill have an annual operating bud get of $250 million. Although A&M will not be able to enjoy having the facility built in Bur leson County, it will continue striv ing to be a world-renowned research, institution, Millhollon said. “It would have been a big benefit for A&M — there’s no doubt about it,” he said. “When you think you’re good enough and start to feel com placent, you start to deteriorate. Some of those universities we’ve passed up are going to be looking at us, to see what we’re doing and how we’re doing it. “Quality is the key factor. The project would have been something that w'ould have contributed to ex cellence in scholarships and re search. It would have been a great boon for the University.” The Texas A&M University Re search Park would have experienced growth had the supercollider been built in the local area, he said. “There is a smaller collider just outside of Chicago and the road running between Chicago and the research site has become a major thoroughfare lined with high-tech and research businesses,” he said. “I think we (the research park) would have gotten some support from it.” Wednesday, May 13, 1987 Former adviser accepts blame for deception WASHINGTON (AP) — Former National Security Adviser Robert C. McFarlane, conceding memory lap ses and “some tortured language,” said Tuesday that if anyone is at fault for misleading Congress about the Iran-Contra affair, “I am.” McFarlane, testifying under oath for the second full day at the House- Senate hearings, was asked in va rious ways whether there had been a cover-up after the outlines of the af fair became public last Nov. 25. In one highly personal, dramatic exchange at the end of the day, Mc Farlane was asked by Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes, D-Md., if some of his re sponses to Congress in past years about compliance with a ban on U.S. military aid to the Nicaraguan Con tra rebels “were overstated.” “I think that’s true,” McFarlane said. “In all of this, who or what were you trying to shield or protect?” Sar banes asked. After a pause, McFarlane said, “Very likely myself, my reputation, my own record of performance.” Sarbanes persisted, “And only that?” “I believe, Sen. Sarbanes, that President Reagan’s motives and di rection to his subordinates through out this enterprise has always been in keeping with the law and national values,” McFarlane said. “I don’t think he is at fault here, and if any body is, I am.” In general, though, McFarlane parried close questioning, such as that conducted for most of the day by John Nields, counsel for the House committee. In other developments: • At the White House, Reagan was asked about his possible involve ment in seeking foreign financial support for the Contras while a con gressional ban on U.S. military aid was in effect. “I’ve said that I’m not going to answer any questions on those things until this (investigation) is over” the president told reporters during a picture-taking session with Republican congressional leaders. “If I were going to answer any ques tions, I’d say, ‘No.’ ” • Later in the day, Reagan, re ceiving a medal for his efforts on be half of democracy in Latin America, declared, “We must remember that in Nicaragua the freedom fighters’ fight is our fight.” He commented before being presented the Gold In- signe of the Pan American Society, made up of executives from compa nies that do business in Latin Amer ica. • McFarlane, a former Marine officer, defended his former Na tional Security Council aide, Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North, after being asked why he did not rein North in. “I’m af raid that in the past two days, that Ollie is really getting a bum rap,” he said. • The hearings opened Tuesday with news that one mysterious aspect of the tangled affair might have “I believe . . . that Presi dent Reagan’s motives . . . have always been in keep ing with the law and na tional values. / don’t think he is at fault here, and if anybody is, I am. ’’ — Robert C. McFarlane, former national security adviser been solved. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate committee, announced that investi gators had accounted for a missing $10 million that the Sultan of Brunei donated to the Nicaraguan rebels at the request of the Reagan adminis tration. The money was deposited into the wrong Swiss bank account, Inouye said, apparently by mistake, and the bank involved has filed criminal charges seeking the return of the money. He declined to name the person who received the money. After that, Nields began his cross- examination of McFarlane, whose testimony is considered important because of his almost daily contact with Reagan from October 1983 through December 1985 while Mc Farlane was the president’s national security adviser. McFarlane worked closely with North and with Rear Adm. John Poindexter, who suc ceeded McFarlane in his White House post. McFarlane, under questioning from Nields, denied that he, Poin dexter and North have adjusted their stories to say they were un aware that Israel was shipping U.S.- made missiles to Iran in November 1985 as part of a plan to gain the re lease of U.S. hostages. A chronology that all three con tributed to, prepared for use by White House officials last Novem ber, said the shipment contained oil drilling parts rather than weapons. Records: Texas prisons among worst violators of wastewater laws DALLAS (AP) — The Texas prison system is one of the state’s worst violators of laws against polluting public water, state and federal records show. At many of the 27 prisons op erated by the Texas Department of Corrections, discharges of mil lions of gallons of raw or poorly treated water have spilled from sewage treatment plants, livestock feedlots and other facilities into rivers, records show. The streams receiving the wastes include portions of the Trinity and Brazos rivers that are used as drinking supplies down stream from the prisons. In some cases, the Dallas Morning News reported Tues day, the water was discharged even though the department had no state or federal permits to dump it. Also, discharges have contained levels of pollutants far exceeding limits specified in per mits. “(The TDC’s) primary job is in carcerating the criminals who have done the rest of us bad,” said Myron Knudson, director of the water division of the Environ mental Protection Agency’s of fice in Dallas. “And they’ve let a lot of things slip in wastewater treat ment.” Faced with budgetary con straints and a teeming convict population, TDC officials say they are trying to improve sew age-treatment deficiencies. Robert E. Petty, assistant direc tor for prison construction said, “We’ve had problems. I’m not going to tell you that everything operates 100 percent correctly.” Yet despite years of docu mented pollution violations at state prisons, only recently have regulators taken steps to force the department into compliance with state and federal laws. An enforcement report pre pared in March by the water com mission staff listed chronic viola- , tions, some dating back years, at a half-dozen prison units. About 150,000 gallons of wast ewater daily have spilled into a branch of the Trinity River from the meat-packing plant at the Coffield Unit in Anderson County for at least the past year, EPA and water commission re cords show. At the Beto II unit in Ander son County, a levee broke on a holding jxmd in July 1983, caus ing 200,000 gallons of sewage to pour into the Trinity, endanger ing fish, according to records. The water commission report said the TDC could be fined up to $176,000 for the violations, but the staff recommends the fine be waived because it would impose a financial hardship on the agency. The enforcement report also recommends the department be ordered to make improvements at sewage treatment plants throughout the prison system so that they will be in compliance with state standards.