Monday, February 15, IQSS/H'he Battalion/Page 3 State and Local Ctbouncil chooses Muller for ’88-’89 MSC president By Mark Gee ob! H Staff Writer fwiziiffijBFrank Muller III, a senior indus- ™l engineer from Tulsa, Okla., was terrnm P ecte< ^ b y l b e Memorial Student 5 pi , Hnter Counc il Monday, Feb.8, to be ' bhc S|*|th| 1988-1989 MSC president. ^ ^'116 MSC has a $3.2 million bud- L used to sponsor such programs the n [r »ast week’s “U.S.S.R —Tne Krem- ' V in Transition” conference pre- , Bited by the Student Conference >0 * s i" ! Ton Mational Affairs committee. ^ lilcffaBMuller, who has been involved in ’it*veils f .pt' MSC for three years, sees his ; Tin _ mw position as a way to support the Wato v* ; MSC Committees. r , “■‘The president’s position is very ™ *Bministrative,” Midler said. “If ^®neone has a problem, 1 want to itfit feBowifl can help them. That’s what eKenk b e my job as. I want to help and ^^Bything I can do to make things , ., Rrk smoother or go better, 1 want '™ f 4do it.” fnfflCIBHThis year he was the MSC’s vice Besident of operations. He was in- i goes, Bbed in MSC SCON A for two years . , .'■fore being selected as the vice /till wiBesident of operations. tor forll Muller will assume current MSC President Linda Hartman’s position in April. Until then, he is working with the MSC Nominating Commit tee to fill the other leadership posi tions on the MSC] Council. The first round of interviews for those posi tions is Saturday and Sunday. Muller said he wants to attract more general committee members to the MSC. He said about 1,500 stu dents are involved in the MSC’s com mittees but there is enough work for 2,500. Muller said the MSC] is a place to learn and that it has opportunities for every student. “I believe the MSC is one place where you can go to learn lead ership, management, organization and time-management skills,” he said. “It is the whole other educa tion. You go to class and you learn how to do a problem. But you don’t apply it. In the MSC you apply it again and again and again.” Muller said students in the MSC can learn and experiment without life-encompassing consequences. Students who solicit funds are an ex ample. “It is an intimidating experience to request $500 from a big-time Ag or businessman,” Muller said. “But it is an incredible experience because it breaks down the barrier of ‘Gee, can I walk into that office?’ ” Working with Student Govern ment to represent students’ interests is a priority for Muller. “We have two very powerful orga nizations on campus (MSC and Stu dent Government) — combine them and you’re that much more power ful,” Muller said. He said students’ interests were not represented when Rudder Tower Dining Center was turned into a faculty club. “It (Rudder Dinning Center) was a great meeting place, especially for people in the MSC,” Muller said. “That is now taken away from us. Students really lost something — we really did.” Muller said it is difficult for stu dents to challenge the faculty and administration but strong ties be tween student organizations would increase students’ representation. “If they (faculty and administra tion) are trying to slide things past Student Government and the MSC, then something is wrong,” Muller said. “Because students need to have a knowledge and awareness and, I honestly feel, an input into the deci sions that are made on this campus because they directly affect us.” Muller said he would like to see Student Government located in the MSC if the MSC is expanded be cause that would increase the bond between the two organizations. Along with his MSC] experience, Muller has been involved in Student Government’s Muster Committee, Parents Weekend and Traditions Council. He has been a Fish Camp Counselor for two years. This year he is a Fish Camp co-chairman. He is also the Commanding Officer of Company B-2. “I’ve seen the value of all the orga nizations on campus,” Muller said. “And I’ve chosen one that I want to be a major part of next year and that will be the only thing I will be doing. I’m looking forward to that very much.” Photo by Mark Gee Frank Muller.Ill, an industrial engineering major, will be the MSC president for 1988-89. Muller stresses the opportunities available for students in the MSC. Investigators search for cause of blaze DALLAS (AP) — Fire investi gators said Sunday they will inter view residents and continue to sift through the rubble of a Dallas apartment complex to find the cause of a fire that killed a woman and her three-year-old child. “We’ll try to piece together a scenario of what transpired to the best we can,” said Capt. Don Howard, a member of the investi gations division. The fire on Friday destroyed 56 apartments and caused more than $1 million in damage, offi cials said. The victims are thought to be Maria Medina, 25, and her daughter, Angela, the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s of fice said. Residents said they tried to persuade the woman to jump off or throw her daughter from a third-floor balcony, but the woman refused. A few minutes later, the building collapsed. Firefighters later found the two bodies buried in a six-foot pile of debris. Some residents said they had smelled ether, a highly flammable chemical, when the fire started. Howard said no evidence that ether may have been a factor in the fire has turned up. Most of the 100 residents dis placed by the fire found shelter in vacant apartments at the com plex. Huge coral forest in Gulf of Mexico to be protected as marine sanctuary SABINE PASS (AP) —The Flower Garden Banks, a huge forest of coral in the Gulf of Mexico south of Sabine Pass, is in line for protec tion as a national marine sanctuary to stop damage caused by ship anchors and pollution. Coral heads in the Flower Gar dens are branch-like formations that have grown one inch per decade and now stretch up to 60 feet long. “When an anchor knocks off a co ral head, it falls to the bottom, gets covered by sand and dies,” said John Everett, a Beaumont scuba shop owner, who has dived at the Flower C>ardens for 17 years. Located about 120 miles south of Sabine Pass, the complete reef sys tem spans 100 miles along the outer continental shelf. The most valuable but vulnerable sections sit atop two mountainous domes, 16 miles apart, that rise more than 600 feet from the ocean floor to within 60 feet of the surface. Protective action for the Flower Gardens languished since 1980, when, a year after it was first consid ered, the National Oceanic and At mospheric Administration sus pended action on it as a sanctuary candidate. Designation as marine sanctuary means a NOAA division would have authority to enforce protective mea sures such as a ban on anchoring in the reef. The agency had been informed that a Coral Fisheries Management Plan about to be implemented by an other agency would restrict anchoring in the Flower Gardens, resolving the issue of greatest con cern. When the coral fisheries regu lations finally appeared, the no anchoring provision had disap peared. The sanctuary issue for the Flower Gardens has been locked in a bureaucratic tussle since then, the Beaumont Enterprise reported, but the new chief of NOAA’s Marine and Estuarine Management Divi sion, Joseph Uravitch, has made a priority of the Flower Gardens sanctuary designation. Ralph Lopez, project manager for Flower Gardens, said, “He (Ura vitch) is really pushing to get these projects through. If the current schedule holds, the Flower Gardens should join the ranks of the six other underwater re gions as a marine sanctuary by spring 1989, Lopez said. At two marine sanctuaries in the Florida Keys, NOAA successfully enlisted the help of commercial div ing boat crews to monitor compli ance with the sanctuary designation. “It’s still incredibly beautiful,” Ev erett said. “You can see the length of a football field. The water is a lot clearer than off Florida, which is supposedly the diver’s paradise.” 4r MSC OPAS presents FOCUS ON the PERFORMING ARTS-WEEE - FEB. 14 - FEB. 15 - FEB. 16 2:00 FOPA Reception - Rudder Exhibit Hall 3:00 BVSO: Hansel and Gretel - Rudder Audtorium 3:30 Christopher Parkening - Guitar Workshop 2:00 U.S. Air Force Chamber Players - MSC Lounge 8:00 MSC OPAS: Christopher Parkening - Rudder Auditorium 11:00-1:00 TAMU Dance Organizations - MSC Lounge 8:00 TAMU Dance Arts Society Recital - Rudder Theater One you pay for, one you don't. When you treat yourself to a 100% natural Little Cae sars pizza, we'll treat you to a sec ond pizza, FREE. FEB. 17 * 12:30 Lambda Sigma Fountain Forum: "Why Texas A&M Needs a Fine Arts Department" - Rudder Fountain * 8:00 "Impromptu" and " Kaleidoscope - Scenes from the Modem Theater' - A&M Consolidated and Bryan High School - Rudder Theater THUR. - FEB. 18 p Rl. - FEB. 19 S AT. - FEB. 20 * 11:00-3:00 TAMU Ensembles - MSC Lounge * 7:00 Paul Hersh: Lecture-recital "The Inner World of Robert Schumann" - Rudder Theater 12:00-3:00 Miss TAMU Pageant Talent Preview - MSC Lounge 8:00 University Chamber Series: Paul and Stefan Hersh, Piano/Violin Recital - Rudder Theater 8:00 am MSC OPAS/TAMU Roadrunners: Run for the Arts FREE BUY ONE PIZZA... GET ONE FREE! Buy any size Original Round pizza at regular price, get identical pizza FREE I Carry Out Only. Expires 3-21-88 B-M-2-15 % FREE Save $6 18 TWO LARGE PIZZAS %% with everything" lO toppings for only 99 plus tax Reg. $18 17 Good Mon.-Wed. Only Valid with coupon at participating Little Caesars. One coupon per customer. Carry out only. Toppings include, pepperoni, ham, bacon, ground beef, sausage, mushrooms, green peppers, onions. Anchovies and hot peppers upon request. (MO SUB- STITUTI0MS OR DELETIOMS). Expires 3-21-88 B-M-2-15 Northgate 268-0220 University & Stasney Outdoor Seating College Station 696-0191 Bryan 776-7171 Texas Ave. &t SW Parkway 29th St Briarcrest