ranv Texas A&M mm 1 • The Battalion Vol. 87 Mo. 113 GSPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, March 10,1988 Republicans realize Bush’s role in race From Associated Press Republican resistance to George f tush’s bid for the White House be- |an crumbling Wednesday as the ipact of his fabulous Super Tues- lay showing sank in. Democrats Mi- lael Dukakis, Albert Gore and ;sse Jackson savored their own suc- :sses while aiminj*-for next week’s howdown in Illinois. Massachusetts Gov. Dukakis and ■en. Gore of Tennessee agreed the Bomination struggle would last until lie convention next summer. But Biey quarreled long-distance over Ihich one of them could attract the Biost voters to the Democratic ban- |er in a campaign against the Re- fublicans. Bush spent the day in Houston sa- oring his 16-state primary sweep Jnd the roughly 600 delegates they Brought. The outlook for Illinois Tasn’t bad either, as Gov. James hompson was backing the vice Resident and Sen. Bob Dole’s own unpaign polls gave Bush the lead. The vice president sounded like 1 He was trying to nudge Dole from Hie race. He declined his rival’s chal- Hnge to debate him in Illinois in a Mlegram that said the time had come mH) ‘look ahead to the issues which [IHistinguish us from the Democrats.” “Good luck,” he wrote. Dole awoke to a campaign in ambles after losing all 17 Super uesday states and conceded, “I’ve ot to win Illinois” to save his candi- acy. The Kansas senator visited the an fHospital in Chicago where he was ""H'eated 40 years ago for his crippling World War II wounds, while his se- Si B Dukakis organized early, spent big to get Texas votes DALLAS (AP) — Michael Duka kis organized early and spent big to convince Texas voters that the eco nomic program dubbed the “Massa chusetts Miracle” could mean jobs and tax breaks for them, analysts said Wednesday. Friends of Vice President George Bush, meanwhile, said they hope Bush’s sweep of all 111 Texas Re- E ublican delegates will show that he as guts as well as GOP glory. Dukakis earned 43 delegates to the national convention based on near-total Super Tuesday returns in Texas, and Jesse Jackson held tight on runner-up with 42 delegates, based on near-complete election re turns for the seven Democratics. Those seven were vying for shares of 197 delegates: 119 awarded through the primary, 64 through Democratic caucuses and 14 awarded to party officials. Dukakis “ran a good campaign,” said George Christian, former press secretary to Lyndon Johnson and an Austin political consultant. “He had the strategy of finding his constituency and organizing it,” Christian said. “His constituency was the Hispanics and liberals. That was a sufficient number to put him at the top” Dukakis and Jackson each could pick up as many as 23 of the 64 dele gates awarded through the caucus system, according to a projection tabulated by the Dallas Morning News and the Houston Chronicle, using. 202 key precincts of the 6,933 statewide. * * » mi Sunny days Senior David Fox studies on the reviewing stand at the Simpson Drill Field before his afternoon class Photo by Mike C. Mulvey Wednesday. Fox says he studies there often to get some sun. Kidney treatment offers non-surgical alternative nior aides met to discuss wholesale staff reductions. Dole aside, the vice president’s ri vals signaled they knew the game was all but over. Rep. Jack Kemp, humbled by the Super Tuesday voters, scheduled a news conference for Thursday, and sources said he would withdraw from the race. The Democratic race was just be ginning. Delegate leader Dukakis stood only about a quarter of the way toward the 2,082 convention votes needed to be nominated. Jackson was the early favorite to win the South Carolina caucuses on Saturday, while he and Sen. Paul Si mon looked like favorite son front runners for next Tuesday’s Illinois primary. Jackson said he was “overcome with a sense of history and joy” after winning primaries in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi. Architects of Super Tuesday say primaries were ‘success’ AUSTIN (AP) — Super Tuesday vas a Texas success, its architects aid Wednesday as they sought to :nock down what they said were ‘myths” about their motives. “One of the myths was that this vas designed to elect some Neander- hal Anglo Southerner,” said state ^en. Chet Edwards, D-Duncanville ind Senate sponsor of the Super Tuesday bill. The Democratic presidential pri- nary in Texas produced positive re sults for Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis and Jesse Jackson, the more liberal candidates. Edwards said that should not dis tress Texas Democrats who believe that only a conservative can win the White House in November. “One benefit of Super Tuesday is egardless of who wins, they’ve been forced to shape their platforms around the concerns of Southern- rs,” Edwards said. But Republican Gov. Bill Clem- 1 | ents seemed pleased that the liberal (Hwing of the Democratic Party pre- ailed in Texas on Tuesday. “I thought it worked beautifully,” Clements said sarcastically. Meanwhile, Vice President George Bush, Clements’ candidate for president, swept the GOP pri mary, capturing all 111 Texas dele gates. Former state Sen. John Traeger, who is credited for making Super Tuesday happen across the South, acknowledged that the Democrats who did well in Texas would have difficulty beating Bush here in No vember. “I would say if I had to handicap it, with my house and lot and wife on it, right now I’d have to say Bush would appear to have the edge. But I certainly wouldn’t concede it to him,” Traeger said. Like Edwards, Traeger denied the Democrats’ goal was to use Super Tuesday to help a conservative can didate. The goal, he said, was partic ipation and it appeared to work: The Tuesday primary drew about 2.77 million voters, a state record. And it drew candidates to Texas, he said. “They were thicker than fleas on a dog’s back,” Traeger said. Rep. Clint Hackney, D-Houston and House sponsor of the Super Tuesday bill, said the primary was “a victory for Texas and Texans.” Hackney and Edwards said Super Tuesday took some of the political thunder away from Iowa and New Hampshire, whose early primaries and caucuses traditionally shape the presidential races. They pointed out that Democrats Rep. Ricnard Gephardt of Missouri, Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois and Re publican Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas did well in those states, but are now struggling. “No longer can candidates spend all of their time, money and re sources in the snows of Iowa,” Ed wards and Hackney said in their Su per Tuesday analysis. George Christian of Austin, a longtime Democratic strategist, said Iowa and New Hampshire will re main important stops on the presi dential trail. By Mark Gee Staff Writer Brazos Valley residents suffering from kidney stones now have access to a non-surgical treatment in Col lege Station that is less painful and less expensive than conventional surgery. The treatment also reduces hospital stay and recouperation time. Extracorporeal shock wave litho tripsy, known as ESWL, is a kidney stone treatment that uses highly pressurized impulses to pulverize kidney stones. The first patient will be treated at Humana HoSpital-Bra- zos Valley the last week in March. For the treatment, a patient is po sitioned in a tub of warm water and the impulses are aimed at the kidney stone using two X-ray images. The stone is pulverized with 10 to 15 minutes of impulses. The impulses break up the stone into sana-sized particles without disturbing the sur rounding tissue. The sand-sized par ticles then are passed naturally through the urinary tract. For most patients, the treatment takes about an hour and a half and the hospital stay is about two and a half days with a day of recoupera tion at home. More than 200,000 people world wide have been treated successfully with ESWL. Of the 600,000 Ameri cans who will suffer from kidney Stones this year, 100,000 will require surgery or ESWL. The ESWL treatment costs about half of what conventional surgery costs, said Marsha Herring, director of marketing and public relations at Humana Hospital-Brazos Valley. The hospital stay after ESWL treatment is an average of 2.5 days. After traditional surgery, the aver age hospital stay is 10 to 14 days. Re couperation time with ESWL is re duced from an average of five days to one. Patients who have under- f one both surgery and EWSL for idney stones say the total ESWL treatment is less painful. Humana Hospital-Brazos Valley joined with four other Humana hos pitals to offer the service to South Texans. A $2.1 million mobile unit rotates among the Humana Hospi tals in College Station, Baytown, Clear Lake, Corpus Christi and Pa sadena. The mobile unit will be available on Fridays to local doctors who have completed training in hospital pro grams certified by the American Urology Association. “We feel that for relatively new, more costly technology such as the li- thotripter, the mobile approach is by far the most practical alternative,” Tom McNeill, managing director of Humana Lithotripsy Centers, said. He said since the unit is mobile, it will have a higher utilization because it will serve the five hospitals and more than 100 cities and towns with a population base of more than one million. Harold Bryant, a Blue Cross 8c Blue Shield representative, said, “This type of technology enables hospitals to deliver a high level of care while at the same time reducing cost to the patient. It’s what the health care industry needs to hold down costs.” The self-contained unit is housed in a 48-foot by 8-foot trailer that is linked with each hospital’s facility. Dr. Richard Morgan, a nephro logist in Bryan, said he is glad to see lithotripsy offered locally because it rapidly is becoming the treatment of choice. He said lithotripsy is usually successful and is less traumatic than surgery. Two years ago, he sent an A&M student to Houston for the litho tripsy treatment. “She suffered from terrible epi sodes when she passed stones,” Mor gan said. “It was a recurring prob lem. The treatment in Houston really cleaned up her kidneys and she has made very good progress since.” Since the kidney is not damaged by the treatment, the procedure can be repeated for those who suffer from recurring renal stones. Dr. Michael Hermans, a urologist at the Scott & White multi-specialty clinic, said that even though ESWL is a major breakthrough in the treat ment of kidney stones, it will not be Army crews work to retrieve bodies following collision FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (AP) — Army crews worked Wednes- ie *» day to retrieve the last eight bod- 1 ies of 17 soldiers killed when two helicopters on a night training mission collided, then plunged 250 feet to the ground and caught fire. The UH-60 Blackhawk heli copters from Fort Campbell spewed wreckage for hundreds of yards and charred the partially wooded, gently rolling site six miles from the choppers’ air field. “One aircraft is located in the trees,” Maj. Randy Schoel, Fort Campbell spokesman, said. “One aircraft is right on the edge of a clearing.” Four bodies remained in the wreckage of each helicopter Wednesday afternoon, Schoel said. He earlier had said all the bodies were retrieved. The Blackhawk, one of the newer helicopters used by the Army, Air Force and Marine Corps, has been grounded four times in three years. Last summer officials said about 40 people had been killed in crashes of the heli copter since 1978. Schoel said the crash occurred on the Kentucky-Tennessee bor- der during a “routine night mis sion,” and left no survivors. “Obviously, there’s an element of risk in everything we do,” Schoel said. “We train up to a standard that reduces that risk to an absolute minimum. Yes it can be, but it’s not necessarily, more dangerous to fly at night.” The helicopters were flying at 92 mph air speed and about 250 feet from the ground when they collided, Schoel said. One of three helicopters flying in forma tion was hit by a fourth, William Harralson, deputy public affairs officer at the fort, said. “There were three aircraft in formation, if you want to say ducks in a row, headed east, and another who was flying solo, hit one of those,” Harralson said. “There can be 10 or 12 battalion sized groups working at Fort Campbell at one time. “We have been told by the tower that the weather was good.” One helicopter crashed on the Tennessee side of the border, the other in Kentucky. Although the soldiers were carrying personal weapons, such as M-16 rifles, the helicopters were not armed. Student Senate disagrees with test schedule changes By Jeff Pollard Staff Writer The Student Senate, at its meeting on Wednesday, unanimously passed a resolution expressing its dissatis faction with the changes made by the Faculty Senate on the Senior finals compromise. “The proposition was radically amended by the Faculty Senate,” said Speaker of the Senate Jay Hays. “There seemed to be some confu sion. The senators thought they were acting in conjunction with our original proposal.” Hays, who was one of the students present at the meeting on Monday, said that, in trying to express his opinion to the contrary, he was not recognized to speak because of poor lighting in the room. The Faculty proposal calls for dead week to begin on Wednesday, April 27 and end on Tuesday, May 3. There would be no class on May 4 and finals would be Thursday, Fri day, Monday and Tuesday (May 5,6,9 and 10). Graduation would then be on the weekend of May 13 and 14. The Student Senate said the com promise’s purpose was to develop a schedule that would assure the stu dents of having a full five-day dead week and reduce the number af days between the last final taken by un dergraduates and the beginning of graduation-related events. Hays said the Faculty proposal would shorten dead week by two more days and he was worried that dead week would eventually be ig nored altogeather. He also said that the extra two days between the end of finals and graduation would re duce the number of people who would normally attend these events had they been on campus. “The Faculty Senate proposal does nothing to keep a relatively ac tive campus for graduation,” said Tom Black, Chairman of the Aca demic Affairs Committee. “The campus will be basically dead except for the birds.” The statement that was passed stated that the Student Senate does not support the amended resolution passed by the Faculty Senate and that they stand behind the Student- /Faculty compromise calling for Se niors to take final on Monday and Tuesday of finals week while other undergraduates take them all week. Hays also explained to senators that the Senior finals changes still must be approved by Dr. Vandiver and would only affect finals for this semester. He said that a committee of faculty, students and other ad ministrators has been formed to find a long-term solution to the problem. The other resolution considered by senators dealt with possible ques able to be used for all patients. Her mans, one of the doctors who will be using the mobile unit, is also an asso ciate professor of surgery at the Texas A&M Medical School. “ESWL is good for stones that are positioned high in the kidney,” he said. “But if the stone has dropped, a more traditional method might have to be used.” He said the treatment is used on both children and adults. But preg nant women with kidney stones can not be treated with ESWL, he said. Hermans said the alternatives to using ESWL include passing the stone naturally or surgery. Although ESWL is less painful than traditional surgery, he said, there is still pain involved. “It is like getting hit in the side a thousand times with a fist,” Her mans said. “The first couple of times it doesn’t hurt that much, but after awhile it does. The patient will be sore for a couple of days.” But he said patients who have had kidney stones removed using both surgery and ESWL prefer the ESWL treatment. Anesthesia is used during both treatments. Hermans said the majority of pa tients treated with ESWL have no side effects but researchers are studying why some patients are de veloping high blood pressure after the treatment. He said a medical journal reported that 8 percent of patients develop high blood pres sure. He said it is not known if the high blood pressure is due to the treat ment or other circumstances. He added that researchers speculate that if high blood pressure develops because of the treatment, it might be caused by the bruising of the kidney during treatment. He said one re search goal is to be able to distin guish those patients who have the potential of developing high blood pressure from the treatment. He said most patients have no complica tions. The treatment was developed by Dornier Medical Inc., a division of a West German aerospace corpora tion. tions to be included in the cour se/instructor evaluations that are completed by students at the end of every semester. The questions for the new standardized evaluation form will be chosen by various peo- E le on campus. Five will be chosen y students, five by faculty, four by the deans and department heads of those colleges involved and three by the administration. The resolution, which was intro duced by Black, was to approve the five questions allocated to students. After some discussion and one failed vote, the resolution was sent back to the Academic Affairs committee for changes to be made in the questions. Debate centered around the re dundancy of two questions that dealt with the amount of course work in a class. In other matters: • Mason Hogan, student body president, announced that the blood drive took in 2,951 units of blood. He said they had hoped to raise 100 units over last fall, but they ended up 15 units under last semester’s to tal. • Hogan also said that over 3,000 students completed about 125 pro jects during Big Event on March 5. He commended the committee for starting out with no allocated funds and ending with about $400 left over for next year. Lawmakers ask Meese to step down WASHINGTON (AP) — Eleven Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee asked Attor ney General Edwin Meese III on Wednesday to step down tempo rarily until independent counsel investigations into his conduct are completed. Meese spokesman Terry Eastland said the attorney gen eral would not comply because, “No one should be urged to step down from a government posi tion simply because that person is under investigation.” The lawmakers made their re quest in a letter to Meese, and five of them held a news conference to elaborate on their remarks. Rep. Barney Frank of Massa chusetts, one of the signers, den ied that the signers had a political motive, saying, “Ed Meese is the best thing to happen to the Dem ocratic Party.” Another signer, Rep. Bruce Morrison of Connecticut, said the standard Meese is setting for ethi cal conduct is “not in the slam mer.” Meese has been under criminal investigation by independent counsel James McKay since last May 11. McKay has been examin ing Meese’s involvement with scandal-plagued Wedtech Corp., and with a $1 billion Iraqi oil pipeline project.