TexasA&M The Battalion Tuesday, Nov. 1, 1988 _ College Station, Texas Vol. 88 No. 47 USPS 045360 12 Pages Hostage Anderson on tape: Reagan has blocked release BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — American hostage Terry Anderson, in a videotape released Monday by his kidnappers, read a statement that accused the Reagan ad ministration of blocking his release and urging the next president to do more. President Reagan denied interfering with efforts to free Anderson, and his chief spokesman. Marlin Fitzwater, de nounced the tape as “a cynical attempt” to influence the Nov. 8 election. Copies of the 2-minute, 35-second tape were delivered to two Western news agencies in Beirut four days after Ander son, 41, marked his fourth birthday in captivity. Statements from the pro-Iranian Is lamic Jihad, which holds Anderson, ac companied the tapes. “On the occasion of Terry Anderson’s birthday and in response to your letters, and according to his desire to send you a recorded message, we hereby enclose with this statement the recorded message on videotape,” the kidnappers said. Anderson, chief Middle East corre spondent for the Associated Press, began the message by identifying himself and saying the date was Oct. 30. “Once again I’m being given a chance to speak to my family, to my friends and to the American people,” he said. Anderson said his spirits were boosted by the birthday greetings he received. “But as my fourth birthday in captivity passes and as the end of my fourth year (in captivity) approaches, I find it diffi cult to keep my hopes and my courage high.” “I’ve been very close to being re leased several times over the past two years. But each time it seems that the U.S. government uses its influence to stop any agreement from being made. And I don’t understand this.” In Los Angeles, Reagan told reporters his administration had done everything possible to win the hostages’ freedom. “I don’t think that was Terry speaking,” he said. “I think he had a script that was given to him. ” Almost heaven Photo byPhelan^^Ebenhack Agriculture communication workers Michele LeNoir , Lana Graves and Helen Hahn dressed as Chuck’s Angels for Hal loween. The three were seen walking by the Blocker Building Monday. When asked about the statement on the tape that the U.S. government inter fered when the hostages were about to be released, Reagan said, “That is absolu tely not true, but let me point something out: Terry Anderson in that terrible con finement at the hands of those barbarians — any information he has has to have come from there; there is no contact with the outside world.” “We have been doing everything we can for the release of the hostages, and the very simple answer is, for those peo ple, to let them go,” the president said. Anderson urged the next president to use his influence “in a positive way, not a negative one,” to end his plight. Of the two candidates, Anderson sin gled out Vice President George Bush. “I’m not asking President Reagan to deal with terrorists, although both he and Mr. Bush did so in the Iran-Contra affair and the TWA hijack,” the message said. Bush has not been named previously as a negotiator in the 1985 jet hijacking, in which Shiite Moslems demanding freedom for Shiite prisoners held 39 Americans for 17 days and killed a U.S. Navy diver. The vice president has minimized his role in the sale of arms to Iran. The deal became known as the Iran-Contra affair when it was revealed that money for the arms was funneled to Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Fitzwater said the comments about Bush were incorrect. It was the third videotaped message from Anderson released by the Islamic Jihad, which kidnapped Anderson on March 16, 1985. He is the longest-held of the 14 foreign hostages. Nine are Americans. In addition to Anderson, Islamic Jihad holds Thomas Sutherland, 56, of Fort Collins, Colo. Silver Taps ceremony will not be held today Silver Taps, normally held on the first Tuesday of each month to honor Texas A&M students who died since the previous Taps, will not be held to night. No A&M students have died since Oct. 4, so the ceremony is unneces sary, A&M Department of Student Affairs officials said Monday. The ceremony is normally held the first Tuesday of each month from September through April, when nec essary. The names pf the deceased students are posted at the base of the flag pole in front of the Academic Building, and flags on campus are flown at half-staff the day of the cere mony. Israeli election day linked to violence JERUSALEM (AP) — Israelis vote today in an election, which is tied to 11 months of violence that has cost the lives of more than 300 Palestinians and 10 Jews, including a rabbi’s daughter and her three children killed in a weekend at tack. Sunday’s firebomb attack on a bus that killed 27-year-old schoolteacher Rachel Weiss and her children was expected to boost the chances of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of the conservative Li kud bloc, who advocates tougher mea sures against the Arab uprising in the oc cupied lands. Daniel Elazar, a political analyst of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, said, “There’s no question it will help Likud. For most voters, this will only re confirm their beliefs, but for those voters sitting on the fence, something like this could push them off to the right. ” Zeev Eitan, a political analyst at Tel Aviv University’s Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, said, “In this election, that could be the difference between a clear victory by one party or a tie.” Polls taken before the attack and pub lished Monday in the newspaper Maariv either gave Likud the edge or indicated a dead heat similar to the one that forced Likud and the center-left Labor Party into a “national unity” coalition in 1984. Four different polls indicated Labor, led by Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, and its left-wing partners would win 47- 55 of the Knesset’s 120 seats, with Likud and its allies getting 56-65. Some seats are expected to be taken by three Arab-oriented parties whose strong support of the Palestine Liberation Orga nization make them unacceptable in ei ther major party’s coalitions. To guard against violence on election day, authorities ordered 14,000 police, border guards and other security person nel into the 17 election districts, which have 5,000 polling places. Final results were not expected before Wednesday and days may be needed to determine a clear winner, if there is one in Israel’s complicated coalition politics. A 48-hour travel curfew confined the 1.5 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip to their homes. It began at 11 p.m. Monday and also barred press coverage without army escort in the territories, where Palestin ians have been in revolt since Dec. 8 against 21 years of Israeli occupation. Presidential candidates start final campaigning Associated Press The Republican ticket of George Bush and Dan Quayle snickered Monday at Michael Dukakis’ late campaign declara tion of liberalism in the race for the White House. Dukakis was running as heir to a great Democratic tradition of “caring government” as he struggled to gain ground. “Miracle of miracles,” taunted Bush, who has waged a campaign-long effort to depict Dukakis as a liberal outside the mainstream. Quayle said he was glad the Massachusetts gov ernor had resolved his political “identity crisis.” Dukakis invoked the names of Roosevelt, Truman and Johrt F. Kennedy as he campaigned in California, saying those Democrats stood for “caring government and caring political leadership. That’s the kind of president I want to be. ” Public polls continued to show Bush-Quayle the solid lead ers in the race over Dukakis and running mate Lloyd Bentsen, with one week and one day to go to judgment day. Democrats said their own private surveys showed late gains for their side, but Bush advisers said their man was leading in virtually all the large states that Dukakis would need to carry to forge an upset. A survey in Missouri gave Bush a 14-point margin. Bush and Dukakis threw themselves into the frenzied final week of campaigning while carpenters at work outside the Ca pitol in Washington, erecting the inaugural stand where one of the would-be presidents will stand on Jan. 20 and take the oath of office. The battle of television commercials entered their latest phase, as well. Dukakis charged the Republicans with “running for the highest office in the land by waging the lowest level campaign in modem history” in a five-minute network commercial to be aired Tuesday night. In a bid to steal one of Bush’s most memorable campaign lines, he said his values — not the vice president’s — would make America “a kinder, gentler na tion.” Bush’s latest commercials included one depicting Dukakis as an incorrigible tax raiser, saying he increased levies on in terest, dividends, meals, corporate, payroll and state income and had signed a sales tax on items “never taxable before.” “And now he wants to do for America what he’s done for Massachusetts,” says a narrator. “American taxpayers can’t afford that risk.” Bush was in Missouri and Kentucky, and he waved a 347- page book that was a compilation of position papers and speeches to buttress his campaign that he’s run a campaign based solidly on the issues. Dukakis aimed his California appeal at women, listing his support for comparable wages, affordable child care, parental leave laws and a woman’s opportunity to have an abortion. He shook his head as he said Quayle had told a 12-year-old girl last week that the law should require her to bear a child if she were raped by her father and became pregnant. Quayle last week told an 11-year-old girl in Illinois that in such a cir cumstance, she should have the child rather than an abortion. But Quayle made no mention of such a law. Texas A&M examines possibility of purchasing supercomputer By Juliette Rizzo Staff Writer During the next several months, Texas A&M will begin researching the possi bility of installing a supercomputer to in crease the University’s edge in compet ing for grants and top quality faculty. A&M will evaluate supercomputer products and then submit a proposal for a supercomputer on campus. About two years ago, supporters for a supercomputer began arguing that, with out access to a supercomputing re sources, a university could not compete for research grants and could not effecti vely compete for top quality faculty and graduate students. Supercomputers are large, fast com puting devices that can process informa tion faster than A&M’s current computer system. They are becoming commonly ac cepted tools for top quality research and graduate instruction on major college campuses. Dr. John J. Dinkel, associate provost for computing, said supercomputers are used in a variety of projects and in re search that tends to focus on engi neering, chemistry, physics and geosci ences. “Without the use of a supercomputer, it is very difficult to compete in the re search arena,” Dinkel said. “We, as a leading research university, are rapidly approaching the need to have one of our own, or we will not continue to maintain the level of competition that we currently have in the research and graduate study arena.” One of the earliest uses of such com puters was in meteorology. The comput ers were used to model and to predict the weather, but calculations were not being completed in time for the next day’s forecast. Supercomputers were imple mented to process all of the data and still get the results back in time. About four years ago, the National Science Foundation decided the United States was losing its ability to compete for the national use of large scale com puters, so it built a series of five national supercomputers scattered across the U.S. Linked by a network, the computers were made readily accessible to re searchers. “What that did was stimulate the use of supercomputers on campus,” Dinkel said. Since the original five were installed, at least a dozen have been purchased by universities for use on campuses nation wide. The demand on campus is a direct result of the national demand that cannot be met by the five national centers alone, because there isn’t enough computer power available. Jayne Waggoner, consultant at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, said that the computers are assets to any univer sity because they process information and do enormous amounts of calcula tions at such fast speeds in very small pe riods of time. “What takes eight hours on a Macin tosh or an IBM-PC takes 20 seconds on a university’s mainframe but, with the use of a supercomputer, the time can be cut to less than two-tenths of a second,” she said. The use of the computer on campus would be spread across many academic disciplines. Dinkel said, “There are even people in the liberal arts who use them, which might seem a bit surprising, but where ver there are large amounts of data or in formation in need of processing, the su percomputer is the likely source.” In comparison with the IBM 30-90, the mainframe computer now used on campus, the supercomputer is highly specialized. For the most part, it would handle large-scale numerical calcula tions, he said. Luther Keeler, director for user serv ices with the University of Texas sys tem’s Center for High Performance Computing, said the supercomputer al lows scientists to do research that really cannot be done as effectively by any other machine. He said the use of the computer for the last two years on the UT campus has had tremendous benefits not only to researchers but to those who sponsor research and grant research funding to the university. “The advantage of having supercom puting equipment is. that it puts the uni versity in a better position to compete for research money,” he said. “It takes a while to get into the public notice, but once people see the tremendous produc tivity from the computer, it’s easier to at tract sources of research funding.” $5 million bail set for Imelda Marcos NEW YORK (AP) — Imelda Mar cos pleaded innocent Monday to racketeering charges for allegedly helping her husband, deposed Phil ippine President Ferdinand Marcos, plunder $ 100 million from their coun try’s treasury. U.S. District Judge John F. Kee nan set baiTfor Mrs. Marcos at $5 million and said she and her ailing husband could not return to Hawaii until details of the bond are worked out. Mrs. Marcos, 59, famous for her opulent lifestyle as first lady of the Philippines, arrived at the federal courthouse by limousine accompa nied by an entourage of at least a dozen people. She wore a full-length, chiffon aquamarine gown with traditional Fil ipino butterfly sleeves, pearl earrings and black pumps, and her queenly ap pearance stunned the crowded court room into silence. Mrs. Marcos later found herself blinking back tears when the judge refused to allow her to return right away to Hawaii, where she and her 71-year-old husband have lived since he was forced out of the Philippines in February 1986. “I’m not going to let the lady go back to the Hawaiian Islands until I’m certain the bail is set,” Keenan said as a glum Mrs. Marcos brushed away a tear. He ordered her to return to court Thursday with her lawyers if they had not worked out a bail package by then with prosecutors. After being fingerprinted and pho tographed by federal marshals, she was released temporarily without bail and told not to leave the New York area. Mrs. Marcos, who arrived Sun day, is staying at the posh Waldorf Towers in a suite reportedly costing $1,800 a night. Aides said the bill would be paid by Marcos friends they would not identify. The Marcoses were indicted Oct. 21 by a federal grand jury in Manhat tan for a racketeering scheme that al legedly plundered the Filipino trea sury of some $103 million. The money allegedly was spirited out of the Philippines to foreign bank accounts and then used to buy prime Manhattan real estate and art objects. J