1 aii em day it dear (j. i fait ctive at Texas A&M The Battalion Monday, 1988 College Station, Texas Vol. USPS 045360 Pages asediu facfc'i l by ll( The Iheresj ? Wlij liani Fi of rai ay it, irdiny dihefr rimecit- umcai® duresij lahoiid gsiepjs s can senoci >r isla inrepwas adqua® nlliiiiiai consari Algerian army opens fire, kills demonstrators ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Soldiers ired into crowds of demonstrators Sun- lay who refused to disperse, and police md hospital sources said at least 200 oeople had died in rioting over rising prices and a government austerity pro- jam. Clashes between the army and demon strators grew more violent late Saturday and early Sunday. Soldiers were ordered lo shoot at protesters who did not dis perse and fired repeatedly. The government confirmed deaths smong security forces. The worst violence was reported in the outhem and eastern suburbs of Algiers and in the western port city of Oran. : ighting also was reported in a dozen provincial centers. In the capital, Algiers, army helieopt- :rs armed with rockets flew low, appar- :ntly to discourage the formation of irowds. The city was mostly calm. After mid day prayers at the city’s mosques, some sand Jeople gathered and chanted, “Chadli idemcit vlust Go!” a reference to President openfee -hadli Bendjedid. They dispersed disclose juickly when soldiers charged. Hospital and police sources in various jarts of the country providing fragmen- ary information said more than 200 peo- )le had been killed and several hundred njured in the past five days. The govern- nenthas given no official death toll, itionsfa From the accounts of sources, as well it cte is descriptions from citizens who wit- iropcra lessed clashes, it seemed likely the final reacto nineic decat )flk iistiv the operant above 40 percent in the capital, and food prices have risen by as much as 40 per cent since January. Algerian radio reported Sunday that crowds of young people confronted tanks in violent outbreaks in the Kabyle moun tain region east of Algiers — where about 2 million Berbers claim they are discriminated against for their non-Ar abic language — as well as in towns in the southern desert. The radio did not re port casualties. The largest number of casualties were reported in the town of Kouba, on south ern fringes of Algiers, where the army fired into a crowd that ignored calls to disperse. Hospital sources, who spoke on conditon of anonymity, said more than 60 people were killed. Witnesses who also demanded ano nymity said soldiers fired with machine guns mounted on tanks and jeeps. In Bachdjarah, in the eastern suburbs of Algiers, 30 people were reported killed, and in the western district of Bab- el-Oued, nine protesters reportedly died. Hundreds of other demonstrators were injured in the Algiers area, hospital offi cials said. ' " ^ " V Mi 'mm mm ffi&K mm tm? ^ - -w • ^ ^ I On the road again! Company K-2 marches down Main Street in downtown Houston Saturday be fore the Texas A&M - Houston football game. The Corps of Cadets makes two trips out of town every the University of Texas vs. year. The second trip this year will be to Austin for A&M game. ieath toll could be much higher than 100. A 26-year-old government official, liouane Fadela, said she saw gen- ics in riot gear “charging bystanders ho were doing nothing, and then kick lem once they were on the ground.” e gendarmes are police under military ntrol. Authorities on Thursday imposed a ite of emergency with overnight cur- :ws and arrested more than 900 people for looting . The official APS Algerian news igency gave a list of reasons for the hunting unrest — crop failure, the col apse of oil prices, the global economic risis and Algeria’s enormous population increase — from 9.4 million in 1954 to lore than 23 million. The unrest began about 10 days ago, hen industrial workers staged strikes for higher wages. The government said it ould not break with its austerity plan to ise wages, and youths began rampag- hg in Algiers and other cities. The austerity plan is aimed at resolv- hg an economic crisis made worse by ie fall in the price of oil, the nation’s ain source of revenue. The plan, an- ounced in January, aims to line up food irices with world markets and cut sur plus workers in the state-owned indus- ies that dominate the economy. The unemployment rate is estimated at Symposium sheds light on Sunshine laws By Alan Sembera Senior Staff Writer Experts on Texas’s Freedom of Infor mation laws attempted to clear up some of the confusion surrounding the laws during a symposium conducted Saturday morning at Texas A&M. Attorneys from the State Bar of Texas and the Texas Attorney General’s Office focused on the public's right to gain ac cess to government information under Texas’s Open Records Act and Open Meetings Act. They reviewed the types of informa tion covered by the laws, how the courts are interpreting them, and what journal ists and other members of the public can do to enforce them. The symposium first covered the Texas Open Meetings Act, which re quires that all actions at government meetings must take place in view of the public unless the action falls under an ex ception listed in the law. Houston attorney Kelly Frels said some of these exceptions include the dis cussion of real estate purchases, the dis cussion of an individual employee and meetings with an attorney to discuss pen ding litigation. These actions can take place in a pri vate executive session, he said. How ever, he added, no final vote can be taken in these closed sessions. Frels said problems occur in these ex ecutive sessions when officials stray away from what they are supposed to be talking about and discuss other issues. The Open Meetings Law also requires governmental bodies to post an agenda of what actions will take place at a meet ing, Frels said. The agenda must be posted in a public place 72 hours in advance of the meet ing. Even actions to occur in closed ex ecutive sessions must be listed on the agenda, Frels said. Frels said it’s hard for a member of the public to stop a government body from breaking the Open Meetings Act if it in sists on ignoring it. Bad publicity for the officials who vi olate the act is the only practical means of prevention, he said, because the local district attorney is unlikely to file crimi nal charges against local officials. He said the main enforcement tool used against offending government bod ies is to have their actions voided by a court if. they weren’t in compliance with the law. Jennifer S. Riggs, chief of the open government section of the Texas Attor ney General’s Office, also was at the symposium to explain how the Texas Open Records Act works. She said when someone wants a copy of a government document and the offi cial who is in charge of the record will not comply, the person seeking the docu ment should submit a written request. The request should be as specific as pos sible, she said. When the government agency receives that request, Riggs said, they have to ei ther release the information or ask for an opinion from the attorney general on whether the document is an open record. One of these two things must be done in a reasonable amount of time, which cannot exceed 10 days, she said. If no at torney general’s opinion is requested within this time, the record is automat ically assumed to be public, she added. All records are public she said, unless they fall under an exception listed in the Open Records Act. Protecting the privacy of government employees and students and concealing investigations by law enforcement agen cies are some of the reasons a document would be considered non-public. When an agency requests an attorney general’s opinion, Riggs said, they must include a copy of the request for the re cords and should give the reason they do not want to disclose them. If an agency does release copies of re cords to someone, the requester has to pay the costs of producing the informa tion, she said. Howard Swindle, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist from the Dallas Morn ing News, also spoke at the event. He called for a tougher Open Records Act, saying the attorney general should have the power to penalize agencies that rou tinely subvert the act’s purpose by stal ling and charging excessive fees. The symposium attracted about 125 people from the Central Texas area, in cluding a large number of government officials and journalists. Tension between these government of ficials and the media was one of the pri mary reasons for organizing the sympo sium, said James B. Sales, president of the Texas Bar, which cosponsored the symposium along with the Texas Free dom of Information Foundation. Sales said there is too much misunder standing in the local area about what government bodies are required to tell the public. This was the fourth of six symposiums to be presented around the state, he said. A&M, Texas Medical Center will benefit from biotechnical institute Official: Rumor of problems with new garage unfounded By Richard Tijerina Staff Writer Rumors about spacing problems in the Northside Parking Garage are un true, said Wesley Peel, Texas A&M Vice Chancellor For Facilities Plan ning and Construction. Rumors had been spreading on campus that trucks would not be able to use the ramps in the parking garage without severe problems making the turns. Peel said the worries about the situ ation are unjustified. “Isn’t it funny how that (rumors) works out?,” Peel said. “We’re not having any problems whatsoever get ting trucks up and down those ramps. I myself have a big Chevy truck and 1 drive up and down there every day.” He said that even vehicles the size of small campers would be able to maneuver within the ramps. The Battalion was allowed to pho tograph Peel’s truck using the ramps. The truck appeared to have no prob lems making the required turns. Tom Williams, A&M director of parking, traffic and transit, said trucks would be able to use the garage with no problems. Peel and Williams said that consid erations are underway to widen the parking spaces to make parking in the garage more convenient. Peel said that the state standard for parking space width is eight feet six inches. Widening the spaces to eight Photo by Mike C. Muivey General Peal drives his full size truck through the new parking garage. He did this to prove trucks could park in the garage. feet nine inches is being discussed. “Considerations are still under way,” Peel said. “We thought if we increased that (width), it would give people more room to get in and out of their cars.” In addition to making the parking spaces wider, plans are being dis cussed to change the angle of the spaces to make it easier to park. Such changes would reduce the number of spaces available by about 100. The garage was planned to hold 2000 cars. Letters were sent to students over the summer informing them that they could reserve spaces in the new park ing garage by mailing back the card enclosed with the letter. Williams said that allocation of spaces is beginning now from reser vations made during the summer. Spaces are being reserved on a first- come, first-served basis, he said. The garage is scheduled to open Jan. 1, 1989. Williams said that con struction and planning is on schedule and that everything should be ready by the opening date. “That date is pretty much set in stone right now, so we’ve been shoot ing for it and we’ll make it,” Wil liams said. “We’re starting to allocate all the parking spaces now so we can be ready by then.” Security for the new garage will be extremely tight, both Williams and Peel said. “It’ll be safer than Fort Knox,” Williams said. “There’ll be security guards there 24 hours a day, plus there’ll be video cameras on hand to record everything.” By Sharon Maberry Staff Writer Texas A&M will be at the forefront of biotechnology with the Institute of Bios ciences and Technology (IBT), to be constructed in Houston in conjunction with the Texas Medical Center. “The purpose (of the IBT) is to inter face Texas A&M and the Texas Medical Center in ways that will complement both units so we can each do more,” John Shadduck, dean of the A&M Col lege of Veterinary Medicine, said. “We hope to be funded primarily by federal funds, private gifts and Univer sity support,” he said. The IBT’s first project will be the study of comparative animal genetics in hope of gaining a detailed understanding of the human genetic composition, he said. “Genetic information (in living orga nisms) is provided in four building blocks,” he said. “All of our inherited in formation is determined by the sequence of those four blocks. “There are about three billion different ways they can be arranged. Sequencing human genes is to know which block is in which place. “Imagine being in space looking at the earth and wanting to know where every single person is, physically. There are about five billion people in the world. “That is the same as looking at a cell and wanting to know the order (of the ar rangement of genetic information). It is very expensive and time consuming.” Shadduck said the IBT researchers will study mice for the key to genetics because much already is known about their genetic maps. This genetic research will be useful for the Texas Medical Center in learning about humans and for Texas A&M in learning about animals of agricultural importance, like cattle and sheep, he said. “Our overall goal for animals of eco nomic importance is to produce foods tuffs of greater nutritional composition for people,” Shadduck said. “We would also like to determine the genetic basis of resistance to disease and genetically en gineer disease-resistant animals. “This is nothing that hasn’t been done before,” Shadduck said of the genetic re search to be conducted at the IBT. “Crops and animals have been improved (by man). The difference is that previous genetic engineering has been by selective breeding (which takes several genera tions). Now it’s being done by gene in sertion (which can bring about the de sired change in one generation).” A difficulty of gene manipulation for desired traits in animals is that many tra its probably are controlled by multiple genes and scientists do not know the lo cation of most of these genes, Shadduck said. The IBT, which will be constructed in two or three years, will involve people on the A&M campus directly, he said. Shadduck said he hopes the IBT will provide opportunities for student in volvement, such as bringing guests to campus to give seminars. Author orders Aggie Players to stop play’s performance By Stephen Masters Senior Staff Writer After what appeared to be a successful performance Thurs day, the Aggie Players’ presentation of “A Question of Identi ty” was canceled before Friday night’s show. Roger Schultz, director of the Theater Arts program, said the play was canceled because of “artistic and creative differ ences” between the play’s producers and the playwright, Pat FTeiffer. Dean Daniel Fallon of the College of Liberal Arts said be cause the play is the property of the playwright, the play wright has the option of stopping production at any time. In this instance, he said, because changes were made to Pfeiffer’s original script and A&M made no disclaimer of the changes, Pfeiffer decided not to allow further presentations of the play. Martell Stroup, a Texas A&M junior theater arts major, was to play the lead role of David Stein. Stroup said none of the performance was done “open script,” but Schultz said the second act of Thursday’s show was done script in hand, with actors reading from Pfeiffer’s original version rather than Director Charles Gordone’s ver sion. According to Stroup, the cancellation of the play was caused solely by problems that existed with the playwright, Pat Pfeiffer. Pfeiffer was unavailable for comment Sunday. Gordone, a distinguished lecturer in the theater arts pro gram, was also unavailable for comment Sunday. Schultz said ticketholders should call the Rudder Box Of fice at 845-1234 for information on refunds.