W T exas A&M mm M # The Battalion ol.87 No. 173 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, July 12, 1988 Reagan names eplacement for ttorney general dee ':20 WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- nt Reagan has chosen former nnsylvania Gov. Richard Thorn burgh to replace Attorney General Mwin Meese III, a knowledgeable Bministration source said Monday. ■ The source, who declined to be ■entified by name, said that Thorn burgh, who once headed the Justice Department’s criminal division, had ■cepted the offer. ■ Reagan told reporters earlier ■onday that there would soon be an ■inouncement of a successor for ■eese, who said last week that he Bould leave the Justice Department by early August. ■ Meese said he had been vindi- ted by independent counsel James BcKay’s investigation of alleged ■rongdoing during Meese’s tenure * attorney general. J Reagan, asked during a photo op- Ullp prtunity about Meese’s successor, dined to be specific about the tim- locf iilg of an announcement. '<151B “Anyone we know?” a reporter ked. "You’ve probably heard of him,” e president replied. 15 ips ■■■11 r IEE 64-8625 j Presidential spokesman Marlin Itzwater declined to confirm or yny that Reagan has settled on hornburgh, who will turn 56 on kturday. Fitzwater said “it’s probably likely lat he (Reagan) has decided, but he ps not made an offer.” Cable News Network reported lat Thornburgh, who left the gov- ■•norship in 1987 after serving two >ur-year terms, had been inter- lewed by White House general Counsel A.B. Gulvahouse. III! White House chief of staff Ken- icth Duberstein on Monday asked | en.John Heinz, R-Pa., for his view f a Thornburgh nomination, [ccording to Heinz spokesman Rich- rd Bryers. I “Heinz said it would be an excel lent choice,” Bryers said. 1 Asked about the report, Fitzwater Health improves for coma victim By Alan Sembera Staff Writer A Texas A&M professor’s daughter is showing signs of im provement at a Houston hospital after being left in a coma May 30 by a car accident in Germany. Laura Burnett, 19, the daugh ter of marketing professor Dr. John Burnett, was flown to Hous ton from Germany on June 23 af ter more than $9,000 was do nated for her return. Dr. Burnett said his daughter, although still unconscious, is showing signs of improvement. “She has her eyes open and she’s able to scan and focus, which is a real good sign,” he said. “She’s just a lot more active than she was even a week and a half ago.” Laura is being treated at the Medical Center del Oro, which specializes in head and spinal in juries. The $6,540 cost of flying Laura home was not covered by insurance, so a fund was set up June 9 at First RepublicBank A&M to raise the money. The goal was met June 17, and the ex tra money raised will be used to cover other expenses incurred af ter the accident. Laura suffered a broken leg, a broken wrist, a broken rib and in juries to the head and brainstem. Dr. Burnett and Laura, who is a junior at Texas Tech Univer sity, were in Europe touring busi nesses as part of a Study Abroad program before the accident oc curred. A friend of the family said Laura was struck by an auto mobile that ran a red light while she was crossing an intersection. said, “You know my policy on per sonnel matters is to neither confirm nor deny. “The president has not talked to Thornburgh or anyone else.” Elsie Hillman, head of George Bush’s presidential campaign in Pennsylvania and a Republican Na tional committeewoman, said in Harrisburg, Pa., that she was told by Bush campaign officials that Thorn burgh had been asked to take the job. Hillman also said that Thorn burgh, who has been rumored as a possible vice presidential running mate for Bush, had agreed to take the job. Fitzwater said “you know that names pop up, people weigh in, and they have to go through background checks. So, we just have to avoid these confirmations.” The spokesman did confirm that Reagan aides spent much of the weekend discussing whom to nomi nate as Meese’s successor. Thornburgh is no stranger to the Department of Justice. He was the U.S. attorney in Pitts burgh from 1969 to 1975, then moved to Washington as assistant at torney general and head of the crim inal division from 1975 to 1977. He served as governor from 1979- 86 and now directs the Institute of Politics at Harvard University’s Ken nedy School of Government. Thornburgh, born in Pittsburgh, has an engineering degree from Yale and a law degree, with high honors, from the University of Pitts burgh. He and his wife Virginia have two sons. Fitzwater had said earlier that the administration wanted to announce the nominee before Congress ad journs Thursday for the Democratic National Convention. The convention begins next Mon day in Atlanta. Bird watching Emily Simmons, 5, of Houston, walks down to the end of the pier at Bryan Municipal Lake to feed the ducks on a summer afternoon. She Photo by Jay Janner was visiting the lake with her sister Melissa and her grandmother Bil lie Douthitt of Bryan. U.S. will pay plane victims’ families WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan, calling Americans “a compassionate people,” said Mon day the government will compensate the families of those who perished in an Iranian airliner shot down by a U.S. Navy cruiser. Without admitting legal liability for the loss of 290 lives when Iran Air Flight 655 was downed July 3, Reagan said the payments should be made on behalf of “the innocent people who were the victims.” There was no immediate indica tion how much money would be in volved. In Congress, whose approval ap parently would be required, House Speaker Jim Wright said lawmakers are likely to be sympathetic to Rea gan’s request, but some members called the request premature be cause of still-unanswered questions about the incident. Some said com pensation should be paid only after Americans held hostage in Lebanon are freed. In its announcement, the White House said there would be no lower ing of the U.S. military profile in the Persian Gulf. And Reagan stressed that “there’s certainly going to be no compensation” for the Iranian gov ernment. On the eve of a scheduled United Nations Security Council debate on the incident, the administration said ultimate responsibility rests with “those who refuse to end” the Iran- Iraq war, especially Iran “which has refused for almost a year to accept and implement Security Council Resolution 598, while it continues unprovoked attacks on innocent neutral shipping and crews in the in ternational waters of the gulf.” “We will not countenance any im pression that this is a payment to the government or an admission of lia bility or is in response to any other external pressure or external inter national political condition between our two countries,” White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said. At the Iranian mission to the U.N. in New York, spokesman Amir Za- mani declined comment on the White House statement. He noted that Iranian Foreign Minister Ali- Akbar Velayati will address the Se curity Council meeting Tuesday af ternoon and is expected to comment on compensation. Amid conflicting reports about whether Iran recovered the flight recorder from the downed A300 Airbus, the White House said anew that Capt. Will C. Rogers III, com mander of the USS Vincennes, took “justifiable defensive actions” to pro tect himself against feared attack by an Iranian F-14 warplane. Fitzwater also said he wasn’t sure whether the administration would have to ask Congress to appropriate the compensation payments but that it would not hesitate to do so. Reagan, asked whether giving compensation might send a bad sig nal, said, “I don’t ever find compas sion a bad precedent.” On Capitol Hill, Wright, D-Texas, said, “If the president is satisfied (that payments are warranted), I would imagine the Congress would be satisfied.” But House Democratic Whip Tony Coelho of California, the par ty’s chief vote-counter, said he be lieved the request would “have some problems” and said he was person ally opposed to it. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a for mer prisoner of war in Vietnam, said that as long as Americans remain hostage in Lebanon by pro-Iranian elements, “there will be resentment to any payment, to any Iranian, un der any circumstances.” Fitzwater made clear that the money would be channeled through some third-party organization or in termediary, such as the Red Cres cent, an arm of the Red Cross, and not the Iranian government. He acknowledged that the U.S. government had not yet addressed the question of how, and with whom, to verify the identities of the dead or survivors who will likely make claims for compensation. All but 38 of the Iran Air passen gers were from Iran. Soviet official announces military plan WASHINGTON (AP) — The So viet Union’s military chief of staff announced Monday an agreement designed to ease superpower friction through creation of a “military-to- military working group,” but said the Red Army plans no unilateral withdrawal from Central Europe. Ending a week-long tour of the United States, Marshal Sergei Akh- romeyev met with President Reagan at the White House before unveiling the agreement at the Pentagon with the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. William Crowe. Along with creation of the joint working group, designed to head off brushfire incidents between the two sides, the two officials also an nounced future tour exchanges among top commanders and several other steps designed to enhance mu tual understanding, including port visits by warships. Akhromeyev and Crowe, flanked by their national flags, were in a jo vial mood, and gingerly handled questions that each might have ex ploited to stress their disagreements. “We do have some differences,” Crowe acknowledged. “Obviously, we did not try to paper those over. “But I also think that we clarified our perspectives. We probably cleared up some misunderstandings, and I think we formed the basis for further exploration,” said the Amer ican admiral. Akhromeyev generously thanked Crowe for taking him on the U.S. tour, unprecedented for such a high-ranking official of the Soviet Defense Ministry, where he is No. 2 man next to Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov. The visit included a cruise aboard an aircraft carrier at sea, a peek inside a B-l bomber, a visit to a missile training facility, a rodeo, a barbeque, the gift of an Indian head dress, and a trip to Crowe’s alma mater, the University of Oklahoma. At the news conference, the two announced agreement to form a joint “military to military working group ... to explore the issue of dangerous military activity in greater detail and make recommen dations.” Examples of the sort of friction the group will attempt to resolve in the future include the fatal shooting by Soviet soldiers of U.S. Maj. Ar thur Nicholson in East Germany in 1985, and the bumping incident in volving U.S. and Soviet ships in the Black Sea last Feb. 12. To stimulate long-range contact, Crowe and Akhromeyev also laid out a two-year exchange program beginning this fall with a meeting be tween senior U.S. and Soviet com manders in Central Europe. Also on the agenda are a return visit to the Soviet Union by Crowe in the summer of 1989, port visits by warships, and tour exchanges of doctors, historians, the commanders of the services, and a marksmanship competition. Despite the comraderie, Akhro meyev apparently made little pro gress convincing Crowe the heavily publicized Soviet “doctrine of de fensive sufficiency” has reduced the threat posed by Warsaw Pact forces. tudy may prompt plan for A&M day care 3N By Susan B. Erb Reporter H Fifteen Texas universities — including the University of Texas, Baylor University and the University of Houston — provide day care services for children of students, faculty and staff. Texas A&M does not. I Proponents who are part of a 10-year cru- »de for campus day care hope the findings If a recent need-assessment committee will lelp make University day care a reality at A&M. H The Child Care Facility Study Committee, formed at the request of Chancellor Perry dkisson, conducted a two-month study on child-care services available in the Bryan-Col- lCge Station area and assessed child-care jeeds of Texas A&M University System staff [nd students, committee chairman Patricia hapman said. I The committee submitted the study results to Dr. Eddie J. Davis, deputy chancellor for Binance and Administraton, on July 1. After reviewing the report, Davis will send it, with ■is recommendations, to Adkisson. | Results of the study are not yet public. Rachel Kennedy, founder of Students with Children, a Texas A&M group designed to lend support to students facing the stress of raising a family while going to school, said the campus child-care problem is not insurmoun table. “It is inevitable that there will be day care at A&M,” she said. “It’s just a matter of time. These other universities have found a way. We just haven’t found a way yet.” The University Child & Family Lab at the University of Texas provides part-time day care for children of students, faculty and staff and for children in the Austin community while UT child-behavior students earn aca demic credit by working at the facility. Johanna Huggans, director of the UT pro gram, said the lab operates as a classroom in the Home Economics Department, allowing for low staff-child ratios and an environment conducive to new ideas. “We probably have a better staff-child ratio than commercial facilities because we have students in the classroom,” Huggans said. “Our ratio is 3-to-15. Most local ratios are 1- to-15. And being in a university setting stimu lates new ideas from both students and fac ulty-member consultants.” Sylvia DeVoge, Texas A&M Research Foundation vice president for Special Centers and administrator of the Ocean Drilling Pro gram, said the possibility of a campus day care pilot project — to be competitively con tracted with a child-care service outside the University and housed in the Research Park on the west side of campus —is still being ex plored, but has run into obstacles from build ing restrictions and lack of physical space. Linda Busby, a member of the Committee on the Status of Women in the University and past president of the Bryan-College Station branch of the American Association of Uni versity Women, said she believes several obstacles have kept A&M campus day care from becoming a reality. “Day care is extremely expensive,” Busby said. “And there has been concern about competition with commercial child care in the area. Space is also a problem — finding an ac tual, physical place to house the facilities. “I think the topic is being discussed by all levels of the University and by all levels of the system —students, faculty, staff, administra tors. This is encouraging in itseli. The ever-increasing need for university day care results from both changing college- student demographics and changing gender roles. U.S. Department of Education figures show that, since 1970, the number of college students over 25 has increased 114 percent, with 42 percent of the nation’s 12.2 million college students over 25. This trend results in more students with children and more de mand for day care. The Census Bureau reports that 51 per cent of mothers with children under 1 year old are in the work force. These women may be working because of financial necessity, or they may be part of a growing number of women over 30 who are having babies and don’t want to give up well-established careers. The result is skyrocketing day-care demands. And day care is not cheap or easy to find. One week (40 to 50 hours) of day care in the Bryan-College Station area ranges from $45 to $65, depending on the age of the child and services provided. And other obstacles arise: Some facilities don’t accept infants, and many have waiting lists for fall. A&M Senate tables motion for GRE plans The Texas A&M Faculty Senate Monday, in a typical short and breezy summer session, tabled a rec ommendation from the graduate council requesting replacement of the GRE with the MCAT test for all applicants for doctor of medicine or doctoral degree in the College of Medicine. Concern was raised about the cor relational relationship between the two tests and whether this would constitute a precedent. Dr. George Chiou, associate dean for graduate studies and research who was invited to the meeting to ex plain the request, did not attend. Because of lack of information, the motion was tabled. During open discussion at the conclusion of the faculty senate, problems with the status and noise level of Sterling C. Evans Library were recognized. It was noted that a committee is al ready looking into the problem and making suggestions. It was suggested that the possibil ity of extending hours for some of the larger campus food services might help alleviate the problem. Also recognized was the problem of an inefficient cataloging system that, along with other factors, con tributes to the “slipping” status of Texas A&M’s library.