ssla The Battalion /ol. 87 No. 125 GSRS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, April 4, 1988 ‘'Mini »n| v seni s 11 captai^ -ar we[ his wai!;] "'dsandli ^-jerLl ' ts outsu awyers give heavily o judicial candidates finished fc f s in the, nthe I AUSTIN (AP) — Nearly one- third of the money contributed this ^ear to candidates for the Texas Su- Teme Court has come from 15 law rms, almost all of whom have cases ending before the high court, a lewspaper reported. Incumbent Justices William Kil- rlin and Ted Robertson are the ggest beneficiaries, although the Bp 15 money-giving firms have tarn’sgoi Bread their contributions among veral candidates, the Dallas Morn- a pair of J ing News reported Sunday, end. ThtB A computer analysis by the Morn- f ephenfBgNevvsof filings with the secretary ApriUtl of state revealed that the 15 law -Id. Bar | firms provided $619,588 of a total of a reus e a dam bvenpcr | lown mil Jrday {k bly be i urne) lass catalog listings wrong for geology winner? $2,MU runner-ii ncan. h andBil d for (he i ,omens f six teaiE on the m Stale fe >t Texas Smith ave irnamew. I the indii A&M w vere Inii iwn, Pi i Evans )e a bil nil hat the.fj ■ength. tiff again ;r poorli unday, the wim ice apt individiiil rried thej ed fourt ffensivek .dded M orus, A aid \IA inst Sonii Students wanting to enroll in Jeology 101 for the Fall 1988 se- aester should not follow the (fourse sections listed in the fall hedule. The listings for the 56 sections f Geology 101 for the fall are lompletely wrong, said Dr. Kdrl oenig, associate department Ijiead in geology. “The class schedule is com- letely in error,” Koeing said. This will cause problems if stu dents try to sign up for the sec- ions listed in the book because hey do not match the ones on the :omputer.” Dr. John Spang, head of the jeology department, said the er- or probably happened when a ial list of 101 sections was urned in for the schedule book- et and was inadvertently used in- tead of the correct version. Spang said photocopied lists of he correct sections were mailed |o the academic advisers in all &M colleges. The corrected list also available in the geology de- artment office in Halbouty 108, Ind copies of it are posted ground the building. I Enrollment in Geology 101 is usually around 1,000 students, Spang said. I “The error will affect a bunch of people,” he said. Koenig said the correct section information in now in the SIMS svstem. “When you register, make sure it is at the right time,” Koenig paid. Students may call the geology Bepartment at 845-2451 for more information. A&M faculty votes to : and < ' blades« )anie! foil an(| i in tlief Ai •eparing' onal impusA| , the site dlegiatet lals National j ociation [ won’A lack of ; rs in its two Air Fotf] 3 Springs •itnmagi j, “The' he naf /en off! DftJ ;M box®! the N0| fh.l dg e / joxingd Senate seats Voting to fill 30 seats on the Texas A&M Faculty Senate will take place from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. [today at the following locations: (Run-offs, if they are needed, [will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday at the same loca- jtions.) Agriculture Polling will be in 202 Peterson [and in the Kleberg Arboretum. Architecture and Environ mental Design Polling will be in the second 1 floor gallery of the Langford Ar- jchitecture Center. Business Administration Polling will be 330 Blocker in I the Undergraduate Programs Of- j lice. Education Polling will be in the first floor | lobby of Harrington Tower and jin 159 Read. Engineering Polling will be in 218 Zachry. Geosciences Polling will be in 204 Oceanog- | raphy and Meterology and in 108C Halbouty. Liberal Arts Polling will be in the Academic Building rotunda and in the sec ond floor lobby of the Blocker ! Building. Sterling C. Evans Library Polling will be in 210 Sterling C. Evans. Medicine Polling will be in the first floor lobby of the Medical Sciences Building. Science Polling will be in 313 Biological Sdences West. Veterinary Medicine Polling will be in the foyer of the main college entrance. about $2 million in contributions raised by Robertson and, Kilgarlin in their separate races. The study, which only dealt with contributions of $500 or more, found that of about $2.4 million re ported to date by candidates in the five Supreme Court races, $729,363 came from the 15 firms. Of the 15 firms, all practice before the Supreme Court, and 12 cur rently have cases pending. The contributions came from the firms themselves, from their political action committees or from individ ual lawyers who work for the firms. The Houston law firm of Fisher, Gallagher, Perrin & Lewis led all firms with at least $75,000 in contri butions to Supreme Court candi dates, the newspaper said. Of the total from Fisher Gal lagher, at least $40,000 went to Kil garlin and $35,000 to Robertson, according to records filed with the secretary of state’s office covering contributions collected through Feb. 27, the latest reporting period. The Houston firm of Helm, Pletcher, Hogan, Bowen & Saunders and its attorneys have contributed $67,500 — $32,500 to Kilgarlin, $30,000 to Robertson and $5,000 to Democratic incumbent Justice Raul Gonzalez. Fisher Gallagher and Helm Pletcher have no cases before the court. Vinson & Elkins, a Houston-based firm that traditionally has been ac tive in financing political campaigns, has contributed $66,500 — about half of that to Robertson and Kilgar lin. The firm also gave $7,000 to Rob ertson’s Republican opponent in the general election, Chief Justice Tom Phillips, the newspaper reported. Vinson & Elkins has 11 cases be fore the high court, according to the court docket. Other major contributors include Houston lawyer Joe Jamail, who has personally contributed $30,000 each to Kilgarlin and Robertson. Jamail was the lawyer for Pennzoil in its jnultibillion-dollar legal battle against Texaco. The Texas Supreme Court has been criticized for dispensing with oral arguments in upholding an $1 1 billion award for Pennzoil last year, the largest civil judgment injudicial history. Attorneys for both companies contributed to justices on the court, with most of the money donated by lawyers representing Pennzoil. Jumpin’ jellybeans Cynthia Chamberlain, a sophomore scientific nu trition major, and Nicki Cook, a sophomore psy- Photo by Shelly Schluter chology major, enjoy their Easter jellybeans Sun day night at the Polo Field. Christians throughout world seek peace during Easter celebrations Associated Press Christians worldwide looked be yond global strife on Easter Sunday, braving unrest in the Holy Land and praying in England for an end to Northern Ireland’s religious blood shed. In his traditional Easter address in Vatican City, Pope John Paul II told 100,000 people in St. Peter’s Square and a broadcast audience of millions to remember people around the world who suffer from injustice and war. “Pray for peace in the world, for justice, pray for the rights of man, especially for religious freedom,” the Pope said. In Jerusalem, about 1,000 faithful pilgrims joined in services at the site where most Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead. But church officials said only about half as many people as last year came to the services at the 12th- century Church of the Holy Sepul cher. Pilgrims were discouraged to travel because of four months of Pal estinian protests and Israeli crack downs in the occupied territories that have resulted in the deaths of more than 130 Arabs. In Canterbury, England, Angli can Archbishop Robert Runcie lik ened the recent murder of two Brit ish soldiers during an Irish Republican Army funeral to the cru cifixion of Christ. The two soldiers were shot and killed in a predominantly Roman Catholic district of west Belfast on March 19 after they were beaten by mourners heading to the burial of an IRA guerrilla. Runcie said in his Easter sermon that Christ’s death was “a dark death, as dark in the cruelty and ha tred which attended it as were the deaths of those two young soldiers in Belfast a fortnight ago.” But he told the worshipers the joyous memory of Christ’s resur rection should give hope for an end to Northern Ireland’s sectarian vio lence. In Belfast, thousands marched peacefully to mark the 1916 Easter Nearly 1,000 travel to Holy Land for Easter JERUSALEM (AP) — Under police and army guard, pilgrims from around the world gathered at dawn for Easter Sunday services in the church marking the site where most Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead. About 1,000 worshipers — half as many as last year — attended services in the 12th-century Church of the Holy Sepulcher, church officials said. Many pilgrims were scared away by four months of almost daily violence in the Israeli-occupied territories that have left more than 130 Palestinians and one Is raeli soldier dead. The Greek Orthodox Church canceled three pre-Easter processions scheduled for the weekend. Security was low-key Sunday at the Crusader-built church, where about half a dozen uniformed police stood guard in the courtyard and at the entrance. But dozens of soldiers were stationed throughout the walled Old City, some on rooftops and others patrolling the narrow cobblestone streets. An Arab attacker stabbed an Israeli policeman in the Old City on Friday. “Before we came, our friends were worried and said they would pray for us,” said 71-year-old Arnold Rose- nbrock, a Lutheran from Kankakee, Ill. “We’ve been fine, but someone was killed in Bethle hem yesterday (Saturday) a few hours before we vis ited,” he said. “There were boulders in the street, and it was tense.” Philip Jiamachello, 31, of Houston, Texas, who at tended the services with his wife and son, said, “We were frightened before we came, but now that we are here, we feel it is safe. For me, this was a very moving experience.” Tourism ministry officials said, tjl^y had no figures for the month of March, but acknowledged a 13 per cent drop in tourism for the first week of the month as compared with a year ago. Officials also expressed con cern about possible cancellations in April and May. Clouds of incense and organ music filled the church during the Latin service held in front of the marble-en closed tomb marking the site where Jesus is believed to have been resurrected. The Roman Catholic patriarch of Jerusalem, Monsi gnor Michel Sabbah, the first Palestinian to hold the post, presided over the service. Last week, he called on worshipers to make special Easter prayers for those caught up in the Arab-Israeli conflict. While the Roman Catholics were celebrating Easter, Orthodox denominations were marking their Palm Sunday, walking along the Via Dolorosa, or Way of Sor row, where Jesus, wearing a crown of thorns, was forced to carry the cross on which he died. Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter this coming Sunday. In the midst of the Easter Service, albout two dozen chanting Coptic priests and choir boys in long dark robes entered the church carrying palm leaves, some formed in the shape of a cross. Easter also fell on the third day of the Jewish holiday of Passover, commemorating the deliverance of the an cient Hebrews from slavery in Egypt. Palestinian shopkeepers opened stores around the church from morning until noon, the times permitted by tlhe Palestine Liberation Organization. The PLO has ordered afternoon strikes in Arab east Jerusalem to protest the Israeli occupation. uprising against British rule in what is now the neighboring Republic of Ireland, where a majority of the population is Catholic. Mainly Protestant Northern Ire land has remained under British control. Police mounted heavy patrols at the main march of about 5,000 peo ple through the Catholic ghettos of west Belfast. The security represented a break from recent police policy of avoiding gatherings involving the outlawed IRA, which is fighting to wrest Northern Ireland from the British and unite it with the Irish Republic. In Vatican City, a cold rain forced worshipers to attend the traditional Easter Mass inside St. Peter’s Ba silica, Christendom’s largest church. Among the participants were U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz, an Episcopalian, and his wife, Helena, a Catholic. Shultz left later Sunday for Israel on the first part of a new Middle East peace shuttle. The pope had given the secretary of state his blessing for the mission Saturday in a private audience. Brazil, the world’s most populous Catholic nation, celebrated Easter with traditional passion plays re counting Christ’s crucifixion. In Rio de Janeiro, many of the main roles, including that of Jesus, were for the first time played by blacks in keeping with the church’s equality campaign. About 90 percent of Brazil’s 135 million people are Roman Catholic. In Beijing, Catholics and Protes tants crowded churches Easter morning, and one pastor said it was the biggest turnout in recent years. About 400 foreigners arrived at the Great Wall at 6 a.m. for an Eas ter sunrise service. However, the crowd of worship ers was greeted by snowfall instead of a sunrise. India could pass China in population WASHINGTON (AP) — India could surpass China as the world’s most populous nation in the not too distant future, the Census Bureau said. China has long been the world’s most heavily populated nation. It currently contains one in five of the Earth’s population. But the time is now forseeable when India will take over the num ber one spot as a result of a popula tion growth rate that is nearly twice as high as China’s, the bureau re ported Sunday. “The latest projections suggest that India’s population may surpass China’s in less than 60 years, or be fore today’s youngsters in both countries reach old age,” the bureau said in its new “World Population Profile: 1987.” The bureau estimates that China currently contains 1,088,169,000 people, compared with India’s 816,828,000. But India has a birth rate of 32 per 1,000 people, compared with 20 per 1,000 in China, which has con ducted an intensive campaign to re duce births in recent years. Subtracting deaths, India’s pop ulation is growing at 2.1 percent an nually. China’s is growing by only 1.3 percent. Thus, population projections for the year 2050 show India as the world’s most populated country, with an anticipated 1,591,204,000 people. At the same time, China would have a population of 1,554,875,000. The report indicated that sharp changes are expected in other na tions too. The Soviet Union, currently ranked third in population, is ex pected to drop to No. 5 by the year 2050. Fourth place United States would slip to eighth, while Indone sia, currently fifth, would drop to seventh place in among the most heavily populated. Expected to replace the Soviet Union in third is Nigeria, currently ranked 13th. Pakistan, now No. 14, is expected to rise to fourth by 2050. Speaker says women overlooked in art world By Kim Sanders Reporter Many innovations in art thoughout history have been brought about by female artists, but these women have not been recognized in classrooms or textbooks, Dr. Eleanor Tufts said Friday in a lecture. “I wanted to give you proof that there are women artists,” Tufts, a professor of art his tory at Southern Methodist University, said to a group of about 20 people in Rudder Tower. She spoke about the development and works of women artists through the ages. “Moving through five centuries of art, starting with the demure beginnings of Sofo- nisba Anguissola and ending with a contepo- rary woman artist from Lousiana who works with dangerous plastics, I think we are open now to a little greater equality (for women art ists),” Tufts said. Her slide presentation included paintings by artists such as Sofonisba Anguissola, Lavi- nia Fontana, Clara Peelers, Emma Stebbins and others reaching as far back as the Renais sance. “I really was perplexed that no one had ever told us anything in all our art history classes about these women artists of the past,” Tufts said. “When we started studying women artists we were amazed that they existed, but now we find that there were some (female) artists actually creating some changes in art.” In the Renaissance, when faces were ex pressionless and very classical, Sofonisba An guissola showed laughter and suppressed mirth in her paintings. She said that women sculptors of the 19th century moved away from neoclassicism and became more realistic in their work. Not many people realize that the over-life- size marble statue of Abraham Lincoln was done by a woman named Vinnie Reams, Tufts said. “Reams was a post office worker who begged Lincoln to pose for her,” Tufts said. “And he said, ‘Young lady. I’m a very busy person, but you may come at lunchtime and sketch me.’ “So she was actually the last person to take his likeness on that fateful day he went to Ford’s Theater.” When the government offered a contest to sculpt Lincoln, Reams was the first woman to win a government commission for art, Tufts said. In response to a question about about per ceived differences between men and women artists, Tufts said that distinction is uneces- sary because art should be judged indepen dently of the artist’s gender. “Eve been trying to prove that they are equal, so I haven’t used that approach,” she said. Tufts agrees that people are beginning to find differencs, but focuses on the equal abil ity of the man and women to be great artists. Tufts says the reason universities ask her to speak is to educate. The faculty do not know enough about women artists to be able to teach their stu dents about them, she said. The speech was sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts, University Art Exhibits and Women’s Studies.