Tuesday, June 21, 1988/The Battalion/Page 3 BBaws State and Local tionk^esearch possibilities raised ith international agreements am or main onth until nes utility bills,"] k. cl you knon i lit tee that tool where nospaiiij and smashed* to use the geo* either phaseotl By Mike W Thomas Reporter I Since 1979 Texas A&M has Rgned formal agreements with 50 ■oreign universities and research in- Htitutions in 21 countries. Each iwn-and-out,Agreement allows A&M and a for- far/borrowertSign institution to work on research, “SDI stinks' 11 share ideas and to exchange fac- times nmilMltyand graduate students. , : w Most recently A&M has become the exatemat*^ third American university to sign npering, “NoHn agreement with the Conference doney now. Bes Grandes Ecoles, a French re- lo?" 1 asked viatch-industry-governmental con- r ’ Hsrtium that represents 140 institu- gun ire. Bons. The Massachusetts Institute of Iden friendiB'echnology and the University of n DOD’sMcyCnhfornia at Berkeley are the only Jther American schools that have a formal agreement with the Grandes oles. Cathleen Loving, International laordinator for the Office of Inter national Coordination, said the memorandums of agreement estab- , Jsh a formal link between two insti tutions that can gain mutual benefits t hat SDI wi t of incoming could spend than .. .in out of did redit • t hanked r bv cooperating on research effort* “The basic agreement recognizes each other’s skills and expertise and then states that we will agree to ag ree,” Loving said. “Dollar amounts and numbers are not usually speci fied in the basic agreements. “Before an agreement is ever signed there must be grassroots sup port from the faculty and deans who would be involved. We want to be sure that each agreement will be fruitful so we must make sure that there is enough interest before drafting the agreement.” Lbving said lack of time is the most common problem preventing some agreements from being signed. “Occasionally we will be contacted by a university that is interested in research being done by a member of our faculty,” she said, “but when we contact that faculty member we find that he or she has too many prior commitments to be able to devote time to working with this other insti tution, so the agreement cannot be made.” The number of agreements that A&M has signed has been steadily increasing since 1982. Last year 10 agreements were signed with univer sities in China, Colombia, Czechoslo vakia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Mexico and Scotland. So far this year A&M has signed 5 agreements including the Universite Catholique de Louvain in Belgium, the Gansu Grassland and Ecological Research Institute in China, Fudan University in China, the Direction De L’Enseignement Superieur Des Telecommunications in France and the Conference Des Grandes Ecoles. “Having our faculty work closely with these foreign institutions helps to provide cultural diversity at A&M,” Loving said. “The research being done is also often spilled over into the classroom, exposing stu dents to the most up to date ad vancements in their field. “The ideal is to not seperate tea ching from research.” Not all of the agreements that A&M has made deal strictly with sci ence and technology. The first agreements signed in 1979 were with four Brazilian institutions and three Mexican schools and dealt with agricultural research. In 1986, A&M signed agreements with The Kob lenz School of Corporate Manage ment in Germany and the University of International Business and Eco nomics in China. The agreement signed in May with Fudan University in China has been directed toward the College of Liberal Arts. The Office of International Coor dination promotes cooperation with foreign insitutions with the Interna tional Enhancement Grant Program. This program lets professors with tenure apply for grants of $20,000 to do research with foreign institu tions. Loving said that although most of the agreements provide many dif ferent benefits for both institutions, A&M also signs agreements with in stitutions in developing countries to help fight poverty and pestilence. Officials announce agricultural loans for Texas farmers AUSTIN (AP) — Officials an nounced Monday that the state is re ady on a $5 million program to en courage lower-interest loans for agricultural projects in such areas as grapes for making wine, various herbs and spices and oriental vegeta ble production. State Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower said “this little dab of money” will go a long way toward providing affordable financing for producing alternative crops, estab lishing marketing channels and building food and fiber processing facilities. Hightower and State Treasurer Ann Richards held a news confer ence to announce details of a pro gram linking state deposits with cer tain agricultural loans chosen by the state. Hightower said the $5 million could fund as many as 65 projects over the next five years. The fund will be used to generate $36 million in new revenue, while creating 4,800 new jobs for the state. The program was authorized by the 1987 Legislature and approved by the voters of the state in the No vember elections. The measure earmarks $5 million in state deposits as an incentive for Texas banks and savings and loan institutions to make lower-interest loans for agricultural diversification projects. Richards said the state treasury will allow financial institutions an in terest rate on a state deposit of 2 points below the market rate for U.S. Treasury bills. Lenders, in turn, must agree pass along these reduced inter 1 ’ rates on loans to qualified borrowf in agriculture related fields. The maximum loan for a sing fiber processing or marketing vei ture is $250,000. The maximun loan for alternative crops produc tion is $100,000. iand as ifkfi imp in theda opelul spaces a few street' another rasps -and-out voice iround andstt heck looked rial dates set for defendants In gang rape Hightower says Texas looking like Dust Bowl .■ SAN DIEGO, Texas (AP) — Eight ol a quarter: t he 10 men accused in a woman’s ■eported abduction and gang rape aimed loudlv HPP eaiei ^ Monday before a state dis- Bict judge, who set trial dates next Bionth for seven in the case. aduate studemw Judge Ricardo Garcia also on • forTheBattal Monday overruled defense motions (juash the indictments stemming . iBom a 19-year-old woman’s report phat she was kidnapped the night of Biarch 26 while walking home from J nearby relative’s house and raped repeatedly by as many as 20 men. I “We’re ready to go to trial,” Duval Bounty District Attorney Rodolfo Gutierrez said. “I think our wit nesses are ready. We’ll be ready on July 11, which is the first setting that pe have.” The South Texas ranching town jas shaken by the woman’s report that one of the scenes during her or- leal, lasting several hours, was a Tnch where spectators at a cock fight ignored her pleas for help and fixiay have joined in the attack. I Many people in San Diego say they are related to at least one de fendant, either by blood or mar riage. ■ fen men were named in 12 in- ■ictments handed up April 21. ■hree of them were charged only Pith sexual assault, five others were charged with sexual assault and ag gravated kidnapping and one man was charged only with kidnapping. ■ One defendant was charged with Kxual assault and two counts of ag gravated kidnapping. AUSTIN (AP) — Parts of Texas are so dry that they resemble the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, State Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower said Monday. “In Texas, there actually are sections of our state that already are in Dust Bowl situa tions,” Hightower said. The National Weather Service’s latest data show only parts of North Dakota, South Da kota, Montana and Minnesota are worse off than South Texas from a searing drought’s effects on crop conditions. “We have the potential, literally, for Dust Bowl conditions,” Hightower said. “And the tragedy is, of course, under the Reagan ad ministration, they have made efforts to do away with the soil and water conservation programs that were developed as a result of the Dust Bowl. “It’s not just a matter of this year’s drought — it has been dry through the ’80s.” He added that dry weather building up over the years led to the Dust Bowl and drought of the 1950s. The worst years of the Dust Bowl, with ex treme wind erosion in Texas, were 1933-36. Hightower was asked to comment on the drought after a news conference with State Treasurer Ann Richards about a new agricul tural loan program. Richards said as she turned the session over to Hightower that she had heard of a rain dance in South Dakota. “We hope the wind moves it south,” High tower quipped. “We have an emergency,” he said. “We need to be treating it as an emergency rather than just appointing task forces up in Wash ington, D.C. to decide whether it’s dry or not. “We need to be responding immediately with tools that already are in the hands of the U.S. secretary of agriculture.” Hightower said his office had appealed to the secretary to declare certain Texas coun ties eligible for federal drought assistance. “They agxeed to do that but they are mov ing very slowly with the designation process,” he said, adding that the local and state paper work had been finished a long time ago. Hightower said 40 counties have been ap proved for federal aid but probably 150 need assistance. “Even that is not going to be enough and in some areas it’s irrelevant,” he said. What good does it do to allow cattle to graze on hay acre age if there is no hay, he said. Hightower said ranchers are being forced to liquidate herds, and farmers and ranchers are going out of business as a result of the drought — “it’s devastating.” Protected woodpeckers could hurt lumber economy of East Texans DALLAS (AP) — U.S. Forest Service officials are worried the fed erally ordered protection of the red- cockaded woodpecker might hurt the East Texas economy, so depen dent on the timber the birds call home. At the urging of environmental groups, U.S. District Judge Robert Parker of Tyler last week issued an injunction against the Forest Service, instructing it not to clear-cut timber — harvest all the trees in a given area — within 1,200 meters of the woodpecker colonies. The ruling could affect up to 200,000 acres, one-third of the state’s federal forest land. Environ mentalists, who favor selective har vesting of trees instead of clear-cut ting, hailed the ruling as a victory. But Texas Forest Supervisor Mike Lannan said the decision could have a “severe impact” on the 12 East Texas counties that receive a per centage of federal timber sales. Those counties receive 25 percent of the income from such sales —$3.8 million last year. By law, half of the money is earmarked for schools, the other half for roads and bridges. Last year, Sabine County received about $425,000 from timber sales, County Judge Royce Smith said. Half of that, about $212,500, went to the road and bridge fund. “That is approximately 35 to 40 percent of the entire road and bridge budget,” Smith said. “It’s real important.” Lannan added that if selective harvesting becomes prevalent, some timber income may be lost because the process is more expensive and time-consuming than clear-cutting. But Ned Fritz, chairman of the Forest Task Force of the Texas Committee on Natural Resources — a plaintiff in the lawsuit against the Forest Service that precipitated Par ker’s ruling — disputes claims that the decision will harm the area’s economy. In Walker County alone, private timber growers use selective harvest ing on at least 60,000 acres, Fritz said. Wines from Texas becoming scarce LUBBOCK (AP) — The newly won celebrity of Texas wines has made the Lone Star libation hard to find on store shelves and res taurant wine lists. While wine columnists around the country tout the high quality of Texas wines, those wanting to sample the bouquet of products from such wineries as Fall Creek, Messina-Hof and Llano Estacado may come up as dry as Chablis in their search. In a recent column lauding the state’s vintages. Vanity Fair mag azine’s wine critic, Joel Fleish man, mourned the shortage as “a great tragedy for wine lovers.” “It’s very frustrating,” said Alan Lagarde, a salesman for Marty’s, a large Dallas wineseller. “I’ve gotten calls from New York and California wanting the wines.” The wines are in short supply to begin with and are popular on restaurant wine lists, Lagarde said. Upscale restaurants in Dallas also are using the wines, which can range in price from $8 to $19, to concoct salad dressings, des serts and meat sauces. “We have tremendous demand from accounts all over the coun try,” Bobby Cox, owner of Pheas ant Ridge winery, said. 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