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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1988)
Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, March 7, 1988 Battalion World and Nation Classifieds Campus racial incidents [H MOVING TO HOUSTON?? REALTOR® Tell us your needs, we’ll find your apartment, condominium or home fast and free. For Free Information and appointment ca 1-800-231-2605 /ms A. STU STUDENT LOANS AVAILABLE GSL, SLS, and PLUS Loans (still making loans for this semester) In Addition To Making Loans, We Offer: •3 to 4 week processing time in most cases •No credit check for SLS loans if a full-time student •Loan consolidation •Graduated repayment •Debt management •Scholarship search service For More Information Call 696-6601 First Venture Group 7607 Eastmark Dr. College Station, Tx. 77840 7511/19 C 6) onnecti&n PART YGR AMS Bellygrams Stripograms Singing Telegrams Etc 693-3004 SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE! Professional Service Finds Scholarships For Yon. Low Cost - Guar anteed Results - Free Info. 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(AP) —Twenty years after race riots tore up cities and an assassin killed civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., a rise in campus racial incidents is shaking some of the nation’s ivory towers. “Even from our crude figures we can see a tremendous increase in the number of reports of racial incidents in schools,” said Eva Sears of the Center for Democratic Renewal, a Ku Klux Klan watchdog group in Atlanta. “We’re not talking about juvenile jokes here,” she said. “We’re talking about something that can have a horribly, horribly vicious outcome.” The number of incidents logged by the center hasjumped from 14 in 1985 to 56 last year, she said. They range from racist jokes on a talk show at the University of Michi gan last year to alleged beatings of black students by whites at the Uni versity of Massachusetts in 1986 and earlier this year. Last spring, a caricature of a black man with a bone through his nose was drawn on a University of Wis consin fraternity lawn. At the University of Pennsylvania last week, campus police maintained round-the-clock protection for a black activist who reportedly re ceived death threats. A school fraternity was ordered to close for 18 months for sponsoring a strip show in which white students jeered black dancers. In Massachusetts, some 40 mem bers of minority groups at Hamp shire College ended a nine-day take over of a school building last week to protest racism. A similar takeover at the nearby University of Massachusetts ended late last month after meetings with the school’s chancellor. And more than 300 Dartmouth students rallied in Hanover, N.H., last week to protest bigotry while po lice guarded the offices of a conser vative weekly publication that launched stinging attacks on a black professor. Joseph E. Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta, said, “It was just a matter of time before things began erupting. “I have sensed a smoldering, growing distrust on campuses for a number of years. I think emotions have run from dissatisfaction to dis gust and from disappointment to outrage.” Black leaders say recent racial un rest is rooted in an apparent lack of civil rights progress in the last two decades. Samuel L. Myers, president of the National Association for Equal Op portunity in Higher Education, which represents 1 17 predominantly black colleges, said, "We’ve come to the 20-year anniversary of the riots of 1967 and the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King and I think peo ple are saying, ‘Wait a minute, things naven’t improved for blacks,’ ” 116-14 on jich Shelb ining se kchin^ th SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Experienced Pool Man agers, Assistant Managers, Swim Coaches, Certified Lifeguards and Instructors with CPR, First Aid and dedication. South, Southwest Houston Area. (713) 499- 2664. !09t3/10 HAS YOUR BICYCLE LEFT YOU FLAT? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used bicycle on consign ment. 846-7021. ' 9U3/9 Answers sought as probe begins into plane crash Black leaders, like Reginald Hi FORT V son, director of the AmericanCouLl McDon; cil on Education’s office of mine five Texas j concerns, say the embers of racisped with have been ignited by attempts topped the emit blacks and keep them in (|)ry over T lege. puthwest ( “Many whites come to campusT With the suming everyone is the same,’’™ ,c 1 said. “And they see special minor this and special minority that, centers here and Hispanic cent! there. S’ “You get a sense of resenimeilgood enc ‘What is he getting; that for?' " Rconferei But there are signs that many sc ; The Agg dents are resisting racism. Hjofinishe lb first rot More than 1,400 blacks ; tol irnamenl whites rallied at the Universks pallas'Reui Michigan last year to denounceiMtCU’s n ist acts on campus. More than overall and whites stood in bone-chillingcoUHy The H UMass last month in supportofjftthebasen IfCU led _ M rallie Most while backlash appearsto oming at large universities will large population of inner-city blad Wilson said. Blacks f rom integrated suburi schools “go to college naively thrback. A be ing the world is a nice place andoBought TC seeing their blackness as a signifiaHh3:52 re thing,” he said. Ijlut dutc “It’s only when they are ojieddie Ric fronted with a racial situation! it the free-i they come to theii black profest Aggies ice tl and fall apart, saying, ‘Why is til|Metcalf : happening to me?’ ” he said. work to do I ing SWl ‘Now we ee days ; nament. 125 students holding a building. built a h 8:17 rd Kero inpshot. put the I HAS SCUBA DIVING LEFf YOU ALL WET? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used scuba equip- 91t3/9 DENVER (AP) — Investigators holding hearings this week on the crash of a Continental Airlines jet that killed 28 people will be looking at ice buildup on the wings, turbu lence from another plane and inex perienced pilots as possible causes. Fifty-four other people were in jured Nov. 15 when Flight 1713 flipped over while taking off from Stapleton International Airport in a snowstorm. The aircraft, a DC-9, broke into three pieces as it slammed into a runway. Officials will question 29 witnesses and survivors during a four day hearing on the crash that begins Tuesday. The investigation may also look at fire and rescue operations that followed the crash. Engine failure has been ruled out as a contributing cause in the crash, NTSB spokesman Ted Lopatkiewicz said Friday. “There’s no evidence of malfunc tion before the loss of control of the aircraft,” he said. The hearing will not be like a courtroom case, Lopatkiewicz stressed in an interview from Wash ington. “This is not an adversarial procee ding,” he said. “It is to elicit informa tion. There will be no finding at the end of the hearing.” A final report, he said, would probably be released around the end of the year. NTSB board member Joseph T. Nall will be chairman of the board of inquiry, on which three other NTSB staff members will serve, Lopatkiewicz said. A technical panel of NTSB staff members will conduct most of the questioning, he said. Witnesses, Lopatkiewicz said, in clude survivors, air-traffic control lers, members of the flight crew, FAA representatives and rescue crew members. “We probably will be looking at cold weather operations, de-icing procedures, the performance of the DC-9, flight crew training and scheduling,” he said. The crash of Flight 1713, which trapped some of the victims in the wreckage for more than six hours, was the first involving commercial fatalities at Stapleton in more than 26 years. It occurred during Denver’s first major storm of the season, which dropped six inches of snow. With winds gusting from the north at more than 20 mph and snow whip ping across the tarmac, officials closed the east-west runway, putting all departing and arriving traffic on the open north-south runway. Flight 1713, which originated in Oklahoma City and whose destina tion was Boise, Idaho, was 1 ’/a hours behind schedule when it took off. Since both the pilot and co-pilot are among the dead, physical evi dence and tape recordings must tell the story of what happened to Flight 1713 as snow swirled across Runway 35-L. Tapes show that within seconds after the plane took off came the sound of a stalling engine, an exple tive, a bang, more engine stalling and impact. But investigators said there is no evidence that would point directly to the cause of the crash. Lopatkiewicz said examination of the engines showed they were thrusting at full power from the time the jet took off until it crashed. Both eyewitnesses and Richard Shevell, a Stanford University aero nautics professor who worked on DC-9s, have questioned whether the time between the de-icing and take off — at least 23 minutes — allowed ice to accumulate on the wings and contributed to the crash. Soldiers raid hospitals, killing two to get i tournar le shot at i pMetcalf ; fere keepii |ICAA tour o the to anything < Id. "The! JERUSALEM (AP) - IsraWl just hi soldiers kif killed two Arab teenaj ers Sunday and dragged an ii jured boy from his bed during I olent sieges at two hospitals intlJ occupied territories, officialssaic Arab protesters hoisted hiiij dreds of outlawed Palestine |CAA bid g I’ll L “I is over in flags to mark a PLO-organizej “Flag Day.” The army said an officer anl two soldiers were indicted cl charges of aggravated assault ii connection with the beating cl two bound Arabs in the Wei Bank city of Nablus in Februan I The beating, which lastel more than 30 minutes, was taptl by CBS News and sparked intei national criticism of the crad down in the West Bank and Gas Strip, which Israel occupiedafit the 1967 Middle East war. Sunday’s fatalities brought il 83 the number of Palestiniar| killed since violence erupted the occupied territories on Deci according to U.N. figures. Army officials said one Pales tinian was fatally shot in Askar refugee camp in the Wes Bank about 40 miles north of rusalem after shots were firedi troops. The Palestine Press Servicl identified the victim as Khalidal Ardah, 17. It marked only til second time Palestinians used guns since the uprising began, f In Mazraa Sharqiya in the Wei Bank about 15 miles noitheastoj Jerusalem, Ayman Salim Al-Jadl 18, was shot in the chest aftel protesters threw stones aal raised Palestinian flags, hospii?; officials said. Hospitals have become centeif of tension in the occupied territo t ies in recent weeks. Hospital ofl ficials say their patients no longed are safe and Israeli officials sa)| they have become havens forpro-j testers. ii— 11 > presents. X 1 XVJL14 JLU We can teach you how to brew your own Register Now for: Modem Homebrewing Practices Thurs, March 10, 24, 31 April 7,14, 21 6-9pm $30/student $32/nonstudent