Tuesday, June 7, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 ioiPallas symphony center j gets budget complaints DALLAS (AP) — The I.M. Pei- IKined Dallas symphony center is I L/ H|ng a crescendo of complaints , lw that it is three years behind Hriypcidnle and at least $30 million sJ I I V C >ver budget. Hhe Morton H. Meyerson Sym- tucky Gov.i'hony Center is expected to open in lunch suppcCptcinber 1989, seven years after to Dukakis °ters approved spending $28.6 mil- •f his stale's ion for the city’s share of the public- withhim. >rivate facility originally scheduled lys after Hi! o open in 1986. continue to But some city officials are begin- question whether all the costs >n Mondas re justified and whether the cen- our other yfr's upkeep — estimated at $1.5 o Dukakis i Billion P er y ear — w iH drain city aid e they hac;.°other arts groups. Bruce Br Eater this month, City Council will ^residential onsider spending $2.5 million more the operaiici 1 ^the center > primarily for im- “gateshasp; )rovements i n lighting and sound eason dratnlB equipment and seating. The addi tions will raise the pricetag of the 2,100-seat center from an original estimate of $49.5 million to $81.5 million. “Everyone is wondering how much it’s really going to cost,” Coun cilman Jerry Bartos said. “It’s like there’s always a reason to keep spending. I think the council is re ady for it to get back in line. It’s a legend already for its costs and com plexity.” When the center opens next year, it will be the most expensive contem porary concert hall built in this country, The Dallas Morning News reported Monday. “It’s a gold-plated building — that’s obvious,” said Charles Tandy, chairman of the council’s arts com mittee. “Sometimes function can be had for a lot less.” The concerns come as Dallas faces a $38.2 million budget shortfall next fiscal year and the prospect of lay offs and a tax increase. The center has strong supporters. “Once it opens, people will not be concerned really about how long it took or how much it cost,” said Leonard Stone, executive director of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. “It’s being built in a very careful way for the long haul. Personally, I’m ex pecting it to be one of the great acoustical rooms in the world.” The center will be opulent, in cluding brass railings, onyx lamps, a limestone exterior and unusual wooden canopies above the stage that can be raised or lowered to en hance sound quality. Stone noted that nearly all of the center’s cost increases are funded by private donations. e told that p. . rr’ Businessmen __discuss trade I^fU.S., Arabs be involved i \ d anything H !k. IBHOUSTON (AP) — American rongly he and Arab businessmen on Mon te of aDerc day began three days of meetings e next Jam her: in a bid to deepen mutual ■demanding, hopefully leading ?mocratic | to broader trade ties. 1 at BushorlM'When you meet your coun oil drilling terparts here, speak your mind,” ingoutac former Texas governor John i administi Connally urged Arab participants iday he fai in a welcoming speech. “Don’t ex- rsial drillint P 6 ' 1 1 perfect world from us, we lorthernC don’t expect one from you.” Wfhe conference, called GUL- m pleased FAmERICA, is intended to pro fit’s kind o: vile a forum for discussion of ig that sale bIS.-Arab trade issues, and an opportunity for businessman to Ket each other. BSheikh Ismail Abu-Dawood, P res ident of the Saudi Com- C TOied Chambers of Commerce 'Wr w and Industry, said in another wel coming speech that improving ^ 5 ties are a priority. ' I ||l|, "We want to st lengthen our re- " I \J 11 laiions, especially on the commer- ® Hi, industrial, investment busi- Hss,” he said. “And it is good dr knowledftitinie for the United States to do ory and cla®;business, right now, since the dol- IH'is competitive.” ts appreciate HA previous conference held in best teacher! Atlanta in 1983 resulted in an es- ;ophomore\ timated $200 million worth of ; welcomer business for both U.S. and Arab p. You could; com P an * es > Michael Saba, confer- night." ente organizer said. ■Connally said the Arab world is s Campbell mostly a mystery to Americans, 1, “She triei w ho know little about the region ts understand:beyond brief television images, e peoplewhol I“You are dealing with a people who are basically provincial by mture, in their knowledge,” Con- the compfe n ally told Arab participants. “The udents attraff American people are not familiar high achifflfyb your countries, your cus- line required toms. So you have to tell us.” )u practicetki I n turn, Connally said Arabs ver classes,’f s bould understand the American distaste for cartels such as OPEC, [and said American criticism of • ,1. Arab countries are often part of “ wonderh broader debate of American I throughout) Pf 1 ^ 8 - Tier she retiil . rith her hiisM Following the greeting re- ersity-Beauff rna,k 1 s ’ P?«‘ cl P ai ?^ bstened to a Alfred Emm_P ant ' lonUS - Gulftrade - and grant’ San Antonio officer seeks to eliminate myths about police SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Detec tive Mel Graf wants teen-agers to know that police officers like base ball and rock music, too. The department’s new public af fairs officer is out to change some commonly held misconceptions of San Antonio’s police. “We’re not ogres,” said Graf, 40, a 20-year veteran of the force. “We want them to know that police offi cers are like everyone else.” He is studying the idea of starting a Police Athletic League and police rock band here. In Houston, he said, police orga nize basketball, baseball and soccer leagues, and in Dallas they concen trate on organizing boxing pro grams for boys. “The idea is to get kids involved that would not normally be in volved,” Graf said. “It’s so kids can build up their self-esteem and char acter.” He has mounted a search for po lice musicians to form a rock band with an anti-drug message for mid dle school students. The project would be patterned after an Ohio police band featuring the music of Michael Jackson and Billy Idol. “We want greater interaction (with youths),” Graf said. “We want them to see officers in a different hght.” The department’s public affairs office was set up Feb. 1 at the direc tion of Police Chief William O. Gib son. Graf works out of the depart ment’s Planning and Research Unit in a third-floor office at downtown police headquarters. The only cost of the program is his detective’s salary. “We were one of the few depart ments in the country without a pub lic affairs officer,” Graf said. “Gib son thought there was a need for one. “I’m a liaison between the com munity and the Police Department. I’m covering a void that hadn’t been addressed. “I’m dealing with community groups, service groups and your school districts, and I’m talking about all of them. My job description changes on a daily basis.” Graf said his interest in commu nity work evolved. “You do one little project and it will hook you,” he said. “It’s a dom ino effect.” Grafs first project was arranging a free country-western concert for 225 senior citizens through the San Antonio Police Officers Association. “It’s like opening a book that you can’t put down,” he said. Now, he says, local businessmen have expressed an interest in help ing get some of these programs on line. “It’s been very positive,” he said. “(City) money is tight. Money is al ways tight.” Thanks to Santikos Theaters, 1,300 disadvantaged youths got to see the inspirational movie “Stand and Deliver,” about an East Los An geles calculus teacher who helped turn around underprivileged chil dren, motivating them to reap high national test scores. “It illustrates that kids can get ahead,” he said of the movie. “We wanted to make sure it was watched by kids so they could get the mes sage.” Graf said he initially was drawn to police work because of the excite ment of the job and the chance to contribute to the community. “There are a lot of things as a po liceman that makes your heart move,” he said. “If you walk into a dark room with a burglar and your heart isn’t pumping, you’re not hu man. “I was looking forward to police work as a career. I was looking to make an impact on the community.” Graf sees his new job as a chance to let teen-agers know that police are on their side. “We’re here to help,” he said. Sriton sets altitude record jn hot-air balloon escapade EARLDO (AP) — A British bal- Mst set a world altitude record onday after tenacious sandbags Sd him to crawl outside his pres- lj|ed gondola at 22,000 feet and eld a Swiss Army knife to lighten sload. - Per Lindstrand, 39, floated his bu- • ne- and solar-powered “Strato- O lest” hot-air balloon to an unoffi- JlV^/5 l %ecord 59,700 feet, well beyond e 55,134-foot record set in 1980, ordinator Peter Mason said. After repeated bad-weather de- ISkhat had postponed liftoff for pthil days, the 12-story-high craft ok off in spotless South Texas ies shortly after dawn. But then e first problem developed: two P|kilo sandbags that were sup- |sed to release automatically did )t. “There was no way I could make e altitude record while carrying ■sand,” Lindstrand said. “ So I A id to climb out of the capsule and Arcd it them.” mailable The first was no problem because Ks near the hatch, but the second ■bn the other side of the craft be- lid the reach of his oxygen line. “I had to take a deep breath, run x?^l||'0und, cut it off and run back jJXlU* ,ari', all the while clinging on to the |||de of the capsule,” he said. ||at got a bit hairy. W “It was a fairly average day, 1 f * M ink,” Lindstrand added jokingly. X h a d a particular problem with e sandbags, but nothing my trusty Swiss Army knife couldn’t handle.” Descending turned out to be diffi cult, too, because solar panels used to heat the air to buoy the craft worked almost too well. “The balloon was more solar than 1 thought,” Lindstrand said. “But it was almost too much. I had a prob lem getting down. There was a vent at the top at the balloon that I had to open and hold open during the de scent.” When he had dropped to 12,000 feet, Linstrand slowed his descent by relighting the butane burners he’d turned off earlier when the oxygen became too thin. At that point, he was falling at 500 feet per minute. Lindstrand had hoped the $200,000 flight would break the 60,000-feet barrier, considered to be technically impossible because of a lack of oxygen in the atmosphere needed for the balloon’s burners. But the two sandbags cost him that goal by draining fuel and forc ing him to begin descending just be fore 60,000 feet. After a S'/h-hour flight, he landed in mid-morning in a field about 60 miles from his launch site on the Callaghan Ranch north of Laredo. “I managed to land in probably the only grassy field between Mexico and Houston,” Lindstrand quipped. “We were very fortunate. We landed without any damage to the balloon or the capsule.” While the ballooning feat is a per sonal achievement for Lindstrand, it ■■■■■iMiaHMilcut herel■■■■■■■■■■■■ l Defensive Driving Course June 7,8 & June 15,16 College Station Hilton For information or to pre-register phone 693-8178 24 hours a day. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Pro-Choice Concerned Women’s Center 7324 Southwest Freeway #1010A Houston, Texas 77074 713-988-2200 FREE PREGNANCY TESTING IMMEDIATE SCHEDULING Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Clba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ '7000 pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT * & LENSES $ QQ00 pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES SQO 00 pr.*-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. 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ICI Films sponsored the Stratoquest project. “Our business is to find ways of conserving fuel,” Lindstrand said. “This is a way to try technology to limit.” Linstrand topped the old altitude record set in 1980 by Julian Nott, Mason said. Two sealed cameras that filmed the craft’s altimeter readings will be shipped to Denver for verifi cation of the record. Last year, Lindstrand and British millionaire Richard Brandson set another record when they became the first ever to cross the Atlantic in a hot air balloon. PLUS PHOTO ID CARD FACILITIES INCLUDE: COED CONDITIONING FLOOR FREE WEIGHTS ICARIAN EQUIPMENT NAUTILUS WET STEAM BATH DESERT DRY SAUNA RELAXING WHIRLPOOL PRIVATE SHOWERS. LOCKERS & DRESSING OPEN 24 HOURS WEEKDAYS AGES 16-80 6 DAYS WEEKLY extra- coed & LADIES AEROBICS 20 MINUTE TANNING BEDS LIFECYCLES NURSERY SUNDAYS A tvW/ffl' 9 \kAf w CQIXEGE ST ATION, TX 846-GYMS Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 ]