iol. 83 No. 8 CJSPS 045360 16 pages « Texas m m V • The Battalion College Station, Texas Friday, September 11,1987 .S. to ask Congress to send Contras aid ■WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- tavy of State George P. Shultz, argu ing that the alternative is a “commu nist victory” in Nicaragua, said Thursday the administration will ask Congress for $270 million in aid to the Contra rebels for an 18-month period. Testifying before the Senate For eign Relations Committee, Shultz said additional aid to the Contras is the best insurance that Nicaragua Poindexter testifies confession about Iran produced sympathy ■WASHINGTON (AP) — After National Security Adviser John M. Poindexter confessed to President Reagan last Nov. 25 of his involve ment in the most damaging incident in Reagan’s political career, there (frag no scolding or reprimand, just sympathy from the president and those around him. ^ ^■\ccording to documents and ' transcripts released Thursday by the congressional Iran-Contra commit tees, Poindexter said he was merely told by the president and his men they were sorry he had to resign. Hpn private testimony taken in four separate sessions last May, June and Ju|y in preparation for Poindexter’s televised testimony in mid-July, the Navy rear admiral also said he was never particularly bothered by the idea of swapping arms to Iran for Americans held hostage in Lebanon. ^■Although Reagan has said repeat- edlv he never intended to approve such a swap, Poindexter told the committees: “I frankly don’t find thiu distasteful.” H“I think that we live in a very im perfect world, a very dangerous world, and sometimes you don’t have the best options or the ideal op tion and you’ve got to do what’s nec essary,” Poindexter said. ■Two months before he testified in public, Poindexter was telling the congressional investigators he had deliberately decided not to inform the president that he had adopted a proposal made by Lt. Col. Oliver L. North to divert money from the arms sales to Iran and use it to bene fit the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. He said he kept the president uninformed because the plan was obviously controversial and “would cause a ruckus if it were exposed.” But when the diversion was ex posed and the decision had been made to accept his resignation, Poin dexter said there was little recrim ination aimed at him. He said he told Donald Regan, then the White House chief of staff, that he had “general knowledge” of the diversion and was going to re- sign. Later that day, he repeated his in tention to the president and other advisers in the Oval Office. Poindexter was asked: “Did any one say to you . . . ‘why did you do such a stupid thing as letting this happen?’ ” After his lawyer objected and the question was rephrased, Poindexter replied: “That sort of expression was never made.” Q. “Did they scold you in any way?” A. “None whatsoever.” Q. “There was no sense of repri mand?” A. “None?’ Q. “Did they express sympathy for your situation?” A. “Yes, they did.” Poindexter said that he decided to authorize the diversion of arms-sale money to the Contras within min utes after North proposed it. He said he simultaneously de cided not to tell Reagan. will comply with the terms of the Central American peace agreement it signed last month in Guatemala. The announcement drew imme diate criticism from a number of congressional Democrats and is cer tain to produce another round of heated debate on Capitol Hill over the administration’s Central Amer ica policy. Shultz said, “If the Guatemalan agreement is to be implemented in a way that secures a negotiated cease fire, a democratic opening in Nicara gua, and accommodation of basic national security interests . . . the United States must continue to furn ish their support to the freedom fighters.” White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reporters the aid re quest will “keep pressure on the Sandinistas as we go through the peace process and let them know the president is serious in his commit ment not to desert the resistance.” The Guatemala agreement, among other steps, calls on the Sandinista government to arrange a cease-fire and to implement demo cratic reform measures by Nov. 7. These measures would occur about five weeks after the current Contra aid allotment expires. It also calls on the United States to cease funding the Contras. House Speaker Jim Wright, D- Texas, who has played an increas ingly influential role in the Central America issue, said it was inappro priate for the administration to make a request for more Contra money while the peace process was under way. “Such a request would anticipate the failure of the peace process,” he said. “I don’t anticipate the failure of the peace process.” “ I anticipate success.” Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., an outspoken critic of the adminis tration policy in Central America, told Shultz during Thursday’s hear ing that a Contra aid request at this time “is the worst possible signal you could send.” Dodd said the administration may be embarked on a “significant, pro found, historical mistake.” Antonio Torar was injured Thursday at 4:06 p.m. when his motorcycle struck a car pulling onto Bizzell Street, said Bob Wiatt, campus director of security and traffic. The driver’s view apparently was blocked by a bus, he said. The motorcycle Photo by Perry A. Liston II then bounced into a parked car, sending Torar over its hood. He was taken to St. Joseph Hospital and released after treatment of facial cuts. The car’s driver, a female A&M student, was charged with failure to yield the right of way, Wiatt said. ■Winds damage pope’s altar, topple twin towers I SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Lashing winds damaged the altar Thursday night that was built for Pope John Paul IPs upcoming ap pearance, toppling twin 12-story metal tow ers minutes after workers scrambled to safety, authorities said. ■ No injuries were reported after the wind storm swept through south and central Texas and crumpled the 150-foot towers just after 6 p.m. CDT, Bexar County Sher iff Harlon Copeland said. Workers fled from the area when a vol unteer firefighter who heard radio reports of the fast-approaching storm warned them with his bullhorn, Copeland said. Minutes later, the towers came crashing down in winds estimated at between 70 and 80 mph. The altar platform itself is about 90 per cent salvageable, and workers were to labor throughout the night to repair the damage so the Mass can go on as scheduled Sunday, archdiocese spokesman Richard Hem- berger said. “The towers, however, will not go back up,” he said. “Everything else will be on schedule. The helium-filled cloud (that was to hover over the pope during the Mass) was damaged also and will not be used.” “This was just one of those freak winds that came out of nowhere,” Hemberger said. The towers were scattered near the stage, as were pieces of about a dozen of the 16 smaller towers representing each of Texas’ dioceses. Copeland blamed the collapse in part on corrugated plastic shields used as part of the stage’s backdrop and said it isn’t clear if the damage can be repaired in time for Sunday’s Mass. “The corrugated plastic shields and fi berglass started blowing and this is because of the wind,” he said. “T hey acted like a sail, and it just blew them (the towers) over.” Workers had labored throughout the af ternoon to put up banners, scaffolding and other finishing touches on the outdoor site two miles outside the city limits. icientists call new test : or AIDS virus superior o existing virus check WASHINGTON (AP) — Re searchers said Thursday they have developed an AIDS diag nostic test that readily can be tai lored to detect new strains of the ■lisease virus and is easier, ■cheaper and more accurate than ; Existing tests. I Scientists at the Research Insti tute of Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, See related story, Page 3 Calif., and the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta said that the test appears to be supe rior to the so-called Western Blot test widely used to confirm infec- f|ion by the AIDS virus. I Health authorities typically Jfcreen blood and test people for AIDS infections using what is “tailed an ELISA test, which de flects antibodies developed against proteins coating human immuno deficiency virus or HIV. Because current ELISA tests tan give false positive readings — sometimes indicating an infection tvhen none is present — scientists werify positive findings with the JpVestern Blot, a more time-con- ■ Turning and difficult-to-perform T^st to detect core proteins of the drus. In a report to be published Fri day in the journal Science, scien tists say they have developed a very specific type of ELISA test that does not produce the false positives or false negatives some times seen in the other two tests. In addition, they say, the new test can be modified easily to de tect other strains of the HIV vi rus. This means that if new dis ease-causing strains of HIV are discovered, tests for them can be produced quickly, they added. “The test is pretty much 100 percent in detecting different strains of HIV,” Dr. Jay A. Nel son of Scripps said in a telephone interview. The test was developed by Drs. John W. Gnann Jr., Michael B.A. Oldstone and Nelson at Scripps and Drs. Joseph B. McCormick and Sheila Mitchell of the CDC. Nelson said researchers at the CDC, as well as at some AIDS re search centers in the United States and Africa, are running comparisons between the new as say and the Western Blot. These results must be submitted to the Food and Drug Administration' and accepted by the agency be fore the new test can be approved for general use, he said. Number of psychology majors grows to greatest in College of Liberal Arts PSYCHOLOGY UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS AT TEXAS A&M 1200+ Expected 1200 - 1100- 1000 - 900 - 700 - 600- 500- 400- '82-83 '83-84 '84-85 ’SB-'Se 'SB-'S? '87-88 ACADEMIC YEAR By Cindy Milton Staff Writer Texas A&M’s growth and a more business-oriented society has caused the number of psychology majors to skyrocket, says Dr. Stephen Wor- chel, head of the psychology depart ment. “We’re the largest major in the College of Liberal Arts by far,” Wor- chel says. The psychology depart ment alone has almost 1,200 stu dents and it continues to grow. Worchel’s efforts to increase the de partment have been effective — the number of undergraduates has in creased by almost 821 students since his arrival. “When I came to A&M, the de partment was really small and it looked like a challenge,” Worchel says. “It didn’t have much of an identity then and I thought it would be interesting to see the department develop.” Worchel feels the department now is “one of the better-kept secrets in the country.” He commended the faculty of the department, which has increased by 11 members this year, and includes several winners of na tional teaching awards. Worchel attributes the increase in psychology majors to a more busi ness and human-related society. “The department is attracting more majors because psychology is the one field of liberal arts that has a little bit to offer everyone,” he says. One psychology course, the Sur vey of Industrial/Organizational Psy chology, has increased in popularity among students, he says. The class stresses theories and practices in or ganizations, something that is im portant to anyone interested in busi ness. Dr. John Sawyer, one of the de partment’s new professors, currently teaching the class, says, “T exas A&M has always been an applied and prac tical place and industrial/organiza tional psychology is very applied and practical. The class fits in with a practical view of the world.” Worchel says there are more peo ple graduating with a psychology de gree than ever before. The benefits, he says, are that learning psychology teaches people to think more crit ically, ask questions and get answers. There are concerns, however, that the department is growing too fast. Worchel says, “We’re having to deal with the numbers. We don’t don’t want to run people through like a factory.” Dr. Ludy Benjamin, who has been teaching introductory psychology at A&M for eight years, says bigger classes pose problems for everyone, and the quality of education the stu dents are getting may be worse. “The large classes hurt the op tions of the teachers,” Benjamin says. “We’re forced to use multiple- choice exams because there isn’t enough time to grade 250 essays. In the long run, it’s a disadvantage to the students because they aren’t able to use practical applications of what they’re learning.” But Worchel says the department is doing everything it possibly can to maintain a high-quality department. “We’ve recently added a bachelor of arts program in addition to the bachelor of science program,” he says. Within the next few years,-.he. _ hopes to add honors courses to the curriculum.