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STUDENT HAIRCARE SAVINGS! i COUPON SAVINGS ! $4 OFF STUDENT CUT Reg. $8 MasterCuts *** family haircuttErs I OFF STUDENT CUT I __I_b.3_s8 ISC OFF ANY PERM MasterCuts family hare utters MasterCuts family haircutters POST OAK MALL 693-9998 Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, November 2,1987 Hungarian professor struggled against odds to preserve ideals By Amy Young Reporter Dr. Andrew Garay has struggled against overwhelming odds to preserve his moral and political standards. Garay, a professor of bioche mistry and biophysics at Texas A&M, was born in Hungary in 1926, a time when the country was overcome with refugees be cause of its defeat in World War I. As a result, Garay’s youth was dominated by social and political problems, and by the coming of another war. “In some respect,” he says, “I am a child of the war. “We realized very early if the war broke out, we wouldn’t have any chance. . . . Either Germans or Russians would eat us up — we saw that. It was no surprise.” Despite these factors, Garay says he had a happy childhood. He spent time with his friends camping, hiking and playing soc cer. “I felt the war was something beyond the circle in which I was living,” he says. “But, little by little, the war penetrated into my consciousness, and when I was about 16, I had already realized something terrible was going on. “I realized that life and death, which is probably for the average American a removed thing, is an everyday phenomenon.” Garay attended the University of Budapest, which employed good professors but had limited funds and facilities compared to those in the United States. Little was allocated toward research de velopment, he says, and as a re sult, professors were forced to work on projects requiring litde money, thus becoming what he describes as “very theoretically oriented, unlike A&M, which is very practically oriented.” Garay says he was forbidden to teach in Hungary because he dis agreed with several political is sues, and the government didn’t want children to be exposed to his ideas. After years of research, Garay rose to higher positions and was eventually named head of his de- artment, a position that allowed im to travel (without his wife) to such places as Paris, Vancouver, Tokyo, Cairo, London and Mos- v. ‘Finally,” says Garay, “I had moral difficulties as a person who had some influence on the poli tics of the country. I had an in- creasingly difficult time doing what they asked me to do. Conse quently, I decided I had three op tions: either to be a party mem ber, to go to prison or to try to escape.” Garay says about 90 percent of those capable of escaping think about it. In 1975, Garay opted to at tempt escape with his wife and two small children by illegally crossing the border. “We went to Yugoslavia in a half-legal way,” he says. “Not with passports, since neither my wife nor my children ever got pass ports, but we wanted to visit someone very near to the border of Yugoslavia. We went to the Italian border and crossed it. This was risking our lives. It really was much more difficult than I had expected. “Fortunately, and simply by co incidence, a person from Dallas was visiting there at the Yugosla vian seashore. He told me, ‘You cannot do that.’ It was the first time I had met him.” After Garay convinced the man he was determined to es cape, the Texan offered to help get Garay and his family safely across the border. “Without his help,” Garay says, “I probably would nave been shot or forced to go back to Hungary by my wife’s or my own fear of being shot. However, with his help, we were able to cross the border in the middle of the night, although he was wounded — not with guns, but while fighting with the border £uard. It was a des perate situation.” After surviving the trauma of crossing the border, Garay and his family were faced with adjust ing to their new environment — a refugee camp in Italy. “It was not a pleasure to be there with two small children for two main reasons,” he says. “First of all, there were lots of provoca tions in the refugee camp. For in stance, we had a Russian refugee who was killed by another Rus sian refugee who cut his throat . . . No one knew the second refugee was an agent. “Another reason was the camp had many gangsters who used the camp for recruiting young refu gees for robberies, smuggling and things of that nature. I came to know, in person, some of the well-known European gangsters. They had, of course, false names such as ‘Steam Engine.’ “They tried to convince the refugees that they were hopeless Dr. Andrew Garay and would never be accepted in the Western world. ‘You will rot here,’ they would tell them. Really, there were at least 20 ref ugees who were there 10-15 years because no one wanted them. Many of them were mentally sick. If not mentally sick, most of them were potentially dangerous.” Garay says the entire process was organized and implemented as soon as he crossed the border. He and his family were systemati cally investigated and placed in a refugee camp. In Europe, he says, things are more strictly or ganized. “We were a little bit afraid that we would be carried back to Hun gary by agents,” he says, “so we al ways stuck together as a family. Half a year later, we got political asylum from an international body in Switzerland. We then got the entry permit from the United States. “You wouldn’t believe what a relief it was, finally, on Nov. 11, 1975, to land at the New York air port. At last we were able to get our first showers. The refugee camp didn’t have good facilities, so we had gone almost every day to the seashore to take a bath there.” In spite of all this, Garay says he doesn’t feel he was mentally damaged by the tragedies he sur vived. “You hear lots of things about Vietnam veterans and how they need psychological care or that they are severely mentally distur bed,” he says. “I agree with that, Photo by Sam Mm but then 80 percent of the world is in the same situation. Every na tion, except maybe England and f ossibly Switzerland, has been umiliated several times in theii history. Americans, in and of themselves, have never suffered this kind of humiliation, whereas the Vietnam veterans did. I, how ever, do not feel affected in this way.” Garay says America has lived up to his expectations — and then some. ^ ^ • • /• . I “There are billions of people who have no way out," he says “They are boxed in. I am happy I was able to come to the United States. I love being here, and I'm glad my family is here." When Garay decided to escape, it was with the knowledge he would leave the rest of his family, his heritage and his past behind to begin anew in a strange world where he knew almost no one. “I miss these things, of course,' he says, “but they can’t be changed. We can never return to Hungary. My wife is sentenced to two and a half years in jail, andl am sentenced to three years. “I am happy. I am close to the end of my life and I feel I have had a beautiful, full life. I have seen the happiness and the opti mism of the numan being under very serious and bad conditions. “I am grateful for what hap pened to me. I have seen the world, and now 1 have the oppor tunity to work, especially in America, and to teach.” Soviet supplier holds contract with Kelly AFB SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A Norwegian company accused of sell ing the Soviets equipment to make submarines run quieter has multi- million-dollar contracts with Kelly Air Force Base, the San Antonio Light reported Sunday. Kelly officials told the newspaper they had contracts worth $ 13.2 mil lion with a division of Kongsberg Vapenfabrikk to manufacture tur bine parts for the sophisticated FI00 engine, used in the F-15 and F-16 fighter jets. Kongsberg was accused by the De fense Department of a gross security breach after it was disclosed this summer that Kongsberg and To shiba shipped $17 million worth of computer-controlled milling equip ment to the Baltic Shipyard. The equipment will allow the Sovi ets to make quieter submarine pro pellers so they can elude detection by U.S. forces, officials say. Kelly officials defended their con tracts, which were awarded in 1981, saying that the division they dealt with, Norsk Jet Air Motors, was not involved in the submarine division, The Defense Department hi 1 banned any future contracts wilt Kongsberg or any of its subsidiaries An official, who asked not to bi identified, said the relationship be tween Norsk and Kongsberg stiF being explored. However, the cur rent contracts will not be canceled the official said. The Association of Former Students Fall Senior Induction Banquet Monday St Tuesday, JJtovember 9 Sl lO, 1987 6:30 p.m. MSC room 224 All December graduates are invited to attend. Complimentary tickets will be available as long as they last, November 2-4 in the lobby of the Clayton W. Williams, Jr. Alumni Center This is your invitation to attend the formal induction of Class of ’87 graduates. TICKETS GIVEN ON FIRST COME—FIRST SERVED BASIS Student LD. Required to Pick-up Ticket