>ort i t better off tha an we were 2 tii Gephardt aske- indict this admit M 83 No. 20 GSPS 045360 12 pages Texas A&MW 8 ^ mm V • The Battalion College Station, Texas Tuesday, September 29, 1987 Simon said, “Hi >; down physician ieace corps wotl nocrats support tnderground nit rdt also has sai et Union shoui ban on all fligi I that some Dm he proposal as; i tended to pusi to the left ani >pes for beit; partly a strugjl the Democraii 1. "Foreignpolio a litmus test.” was before at i|) called STAS rms Race Politia att icia Schroede Kiunce her inlet! id.i\. She wash •bate and initial t ew last week, >ia ;r five were tnd it said, “We coe t war on Moslem mt the world, • reverses its tin the imprisonet visibility forth! le uprooting am rugglers or w i specific timet ed to lifeimpni tounchi, headt nt, a grouptb I has links t'iii Fishin’ for votes Heather Glenn, an accounting major from Dallas, paints her cam paign sign for the freshman presidential election outside Hobby Hall. Photo by Jay Janner Nine candidates are running for the office and the polls will be open Oct. 5, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., at the MSG, Pavilion and Sbisa Dining Hall. Mudslide hits in Columbia; 175 lose lives MEDELLIN, Colombia (AP) — An avalanche of red mud and rock killed at least 175 people, including 43 children, when it thundered down a mountainside and onto a slum area, officials said Monday. Some residents estimated up to 500 people were missing in the scores of buried shacks. “We heard the noise that sounded like an explosion and soon afterward a huge mass of rocks and mud de scended upon us,” said Mary Mos- quera, who lost three daughters in the avalanche. Mayor William Jaramillo Gomez told the radio chain Todelar that about 200 people were injured. Exhausted workers dug through 20 feet of mud Monday but found no survivors — just bodies. Slum dwellers wandered through the area searching for dead or missing rela tives. Other residents tried to find belongings lost in the mudslide. Rescue workers said they were guided in recovering many bodies by dogs howling at the spots where their owners were buried. By nightfall, 175 bodies had been recovered, some buried under more than 36 feet of mud, a fire depart ment spokesman said. Jaramillo Gomez suspended work later Monday as torrential rains for the fourth consecutive day threat ened to send more mud tumbling on top of workers, according to Cara- col, Colombia’s largest radio net work. Jaramillo Gomez told Caracol he had ordered that all victims, many of them unidentified, be interred im mediately to prevent any outbreak of disease. At least 50 people were buried in a mass grave, while the re maining bodies were to be buried to day, he said. The director of the Medellin morgue, Oscar de Jesus Gomez, said in an interview with radio Todelar that at least 43 of the 120 bodies re covered so far were children. Archbishop Alfonso Lopez Tru jillo told radio Todelar that five chil dren were killed in a communion party at one shack. Two of 25 chil dren at another first communion party also were killed. The mudslide covered more than 60 dwellings at the foot of Sugar Loaf Mountain, part of a mountain chain that surrounds Medellin, a city of more than 2 million people 160 miles northwest of Bogota. Despite the continued rain, survi vors searched for what was left of their belongings — television sets, radios, beds, furniture, kitchen utensils — where their homes once stood. Torrential rains have soaked the northern Andes mountains for the past week. Hospitals said Sunday they had treated more than 150 people, most of them children with multiple frac tures and cuts. By Cindy Milton Staff Writer Sixty-one female faculty members re wed raises last year after the Faculty Sen ile passed a resolution urging the Univer- >ity to identify and correct individual cases of salary inequity, said Dr. Clinton Phillips, issociate provost and dean of faculties. The resolution, introduced by the Fac- ilty Senate Committee on the Status of J V Lf f A&M offers female faculty raises to close Gender-based pay equity Part two of a two-part series Women, called for immediate raises for fe- nale faculty members found to be victims )fdiscrimination. It also recommended an- lual observation and evaluation of female alaries to guard against discrimination. Phillips said the 61 faculty members’ sala ries were not raised because overt discrimi nation was found, but because discrepan ces due to a variety of reasons were identified by the administration. The salary adjustments were approved by President Frank E. Vandiver. The Senate women’s status committee, whose members include both men and women faculty and a student representative as well as faculty senators, is working to close an evident 10 percent salary gap be tween male and female faculty at A&M. Figures from the Office of Planning and Institutional Analysis for the 1986-1987 academic year show that only 16 percent of A&M’s faculty is female. Although these numbers look small, there doesn’t appear to be overt discrimina tion at A&M, said Sallie Sheppard, associate provost for the honors program and under graduate studies. Instead, she said, there are fewer women than men available for some of the the tenured, higher-ranking positions at A&M. Tenure track positions, based on a seven- year contract, require more qualifications and generally are harder to get than non- tenured positions, she said. Women, over all, have not sought long-term careers in higher education, so not many have ac quired the necessary qualifications for ten ure, she said. In addition, there are few women in ca reers like engineering and agriculture, so hiring females for some positions isn’t al ways possible, Dr. Carl Erdman, associate dean of engineering, said. “Out of 25 or 30 applications for a posi tion, we rarely get female applicants due to the small number of women with Ph.Ds in these fields,” Erdman said. The University is making an honest ef fort to hire more women and minorities to faculty positions, Erdman said, but diffi culty arises because there are so few women and minority applicants. The non-tenured jobs, including instruc tors and lecturers, often appeal to women because they are contracted on a year-to- year basis and allow flexibility for family life, Shepperd said. Consequently, she added, women tend to swell the ranks of the non-tenured jobs. In 1986, only 19 women held full profes sor positions at A&M, while 745 men had the rank of full professor. The same figures show that 439 men held the rank of asso ciate professor, while only 39 females held this title. However, in the rank of lecturer, which is a non-tenured position, there is a higher comparative percentage of females — 152 women and 240 men hold the title of lec turer at A&M. Another reason upper faculty ranks are underpopulated with females, Sheppard said, is that women usually don’t consider academia as a career choice. “I don’t think it even occurs to most women to go into academia,” she said. “Part of the reason is that women teaching on the university level is not traditional. Teaching at a college or university has not been a built-in ambition for women.” Dr. Walter Buenger, chair of the Com mittee on the Status of Women, added that industry is competitive and appealing for women, so many women choose to go into popular fields such as business and market ing rather than seeking teaching jobs in higher education. Sheppard said women tend to take the pay gap higher-paying, short-term jobs, and many still tend to place a high priority on their husbands and families, putting their ca reers in second place. These trends, however, may be chang ing, Sheppard said. A subcommittee created last week is looking into the hiring and retention prac tices of women faculty members at A&M. The goal of the subcommittee is to make A&M a more attractive place for women to pursue teaching careers. Sheppard said women tend to get their degrees and want to teach and raise their families at the same time. “We’re going to see about hiring couples to teach,” Sheppard said. “I’ve seen couples go to all sorts of extremes — including tem porary separations and commuting — be cause teaching positions are not available for both of them.” Sheppard added that hiring couples in academia is difficult everywhere since it is hard to find simultaneous positions, but that the encouragement of hiring two in stead of one may increase the number of women at A&M. ndependent physicians say HMOs nay not provide best medical care DDAY! VN ime an Ultimate : event on Tues- harsh which layers, is. Any area, e ie is to e inlor- i by your lo- Mall on Hwy graphics are By Mary-Lynne Rice Staff Writer As Texas A&M employees choose tealth care insurance options, a iroup of independent physicians is oncerned that health maintenance irganizations may not offer the best taefits to patients, but an HMO of- ‘tcial says a comprehensive health Ian can provide economical, conve- tientand thorough care. Dr. David Doss, a local obstetri- ian and gynecologist helped orga- lize a group of independent physi- ians to inform A&M employees of heir options regarding health care. The group of about 50, Doss said, institutes the majority of indepen- bt practicing local physicians who lave the goal of promoting the inde- lendent practice of medicine. With this goal comes indepen- lence from large clinics, the govern ment or anyone else, he said. With new health care options this 'car open to A&M employees, they low can choose between health maintenance organizations and icalth insurance, and Doss said the •ption makes losing patients to IMOs a concern to independent •hysicians. Under an HMO, a patient pays a hied monthly charge and usually ets unlimited office visits and treat ment. Before this fall, health insurance where the patient often pays a percentage of every office visit or treatment — was the only plan avail able. Doss said the A&M faculty and staff make up 20 percent to 30 per cent of the Brazos Valley work force. If all of them choose to join an HMO, it will hurt independent phy sicians, he said. “Obviously, our livelihoods are at stake,” he said.“The worst possible scenario is that we might potentially lose all of those (patients) ... If we lose them as patients, it would put a sizeable dent in our practice. “We certainly didn’t think that would happen, but we felt that any one we lost would potentially be an unnecessary loss.” Independent physicians em phasize the importance of thorough research of medical care providers and evaluation of their health care needs before making a decision, Doss said. “The advantages of sticking with independent physicians and riot aligning with an HMO are primarily in not losing your options, in the ability to choose,” he said. The primary advantage of using an independent physician is having a wide range of doctors and facilities to choose from, he said. “If they (patients) stay with inde- endent providers,” Doss said, “they ave the option of going to Houston for cancer treatment; they can go to Pittsburgh to have their liver trans- lant; they can go to Stanford to ave their heart transplant. “I don’t think the majority of em ployees out there at A&M, really, when they think about it, want to lose those things.” Ron Gay, administrative director of the Scott & White Health Plan HMO, said that although HMO pa tients select a doctor from those af filiated with the clinic, there are many physicians to choose from, and care is monitored better under the clinic’s staff. “The whole concept behind an HMO is that we have a list of doctors you can choose from,” Gay said. “Because if we know which doctor you’re seeing and how they are pro viding you with medical care, it’s a lot easier for us to monitor costs and to thereby keep everybody’s costs under control,” he said. Referrals to other clinics or hospi tals, including M.D. Anderson in Houston, are possible and paid for under an HMO plan, Gay said. When choosing a health care plan, many people are drawn to HMOs because tney allow unlimited — usually free — office visits and treat ment for the payment of one monthly premium, he said. Under the Lincoln National health insurance program available to A&M employees, the patient pays 20 percent of the charge of each of fice visit or treatment. But overall, it doesn’t make eco nomic sense for most A&M employ ees to go to an HMO, Doss said. If they’re really that healthy, then they’re spending more money to be involoved in an HMO in the first place, he said. “Because if you’re healthy, you don’t need any care,” he said. “That’s how the HMO makes money; the HMO is happy and See HMOs, page 12 B-1B bomber crashes after birds set engine on fire; 3 land safely LA JUNTA, Colo. (AP) — A B- 1B bomber with six people aboard crashed Monday in a ball of orange flame in the Colorado prairie after birds were sucked into the engines, but three crew members parachuted to safety, authorities said. Hours after the crash, the Air Force said only that the other three crew members were miss ing. It was the first crash of a reg ular production model of the B- 1B, the nation’s newest long- range strategic bomber. The survivors were reported in good condition with minor inju ries at the U.S. Air Force Aca demy hospital in Colorado Springs. The bomber, attached to the 96th Bombardment Wing, left Dyess Air Force Base in Abilene early Monday for the Strategic Training Range Complex near La Junta, 60 miles southeast of Pueblo, the Strategic Air Com mand said. The plane went down two miles south of La Junta at 9:34 a.m., said Capt. Dave Thurston of SAC command headquarters in Omaha, Neb. Bob Buckhorn, a spokesman lor trie federal Aviation Admin istration in Washington, said the E ilot radioed air-traffic control- :rs that he had run into birds during a low-level practice bomb ing run. The pilot immediately began climbing and managed to reach an altitude of roughly 15,500 feet, Buckhorn said, but then re ported that the two engines on the right side had caught fire be cause of “bird ingestion.” It was apparently at that point that the crew attempted to eject from the aircraft, he added. “We’re going down,” the pilot radioed, according to Laurie King, spokesman at Dyess. Sgt. Warren Wright, spokes man for Petersen Air Force Base near Colorado Springs, said the B-1B is designed to carry four crew members, but because it was a training mission two people on board probably were evaluators. SAC officials said the plane was equipped with four ejector seats. Officials at Rockwell Interna tional, the manufacturer of the plane, called birds “one of the hazards” facing the low-lying bomber, which apparently hit the birds at an altitude of about 500 feet.