lexas A&M e Battalion College Station, Texas Vol. USPS 045360 Pages PLO leaders accept Israel’s right to exist ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — PLO leaders accepted a U.N. resolution Sunday implicitly recognizing Is rael’s right to exist and recom mended the PLO’s parliament en dorse the decision. Approval by the Palestine Na tional Council, the PLO’s parlia- ment-in-exile, is virtually certain and would meet one of the conditions for U.S. recognition of the Palestine Lib eration Organization. The action by a committee of PLO leaders showed that chairman Yas ser Arafat has won his struggle with hardliners over the controversial U.N. Resolution 242. In the 450- member PNC, 80 percent to 85 per cent of the parliamentarians are aligned with Arafat. In Washington, President Reagan was asked if he was pleased with the PLO leaders’ action and said, “We’re still looking at that; that’s all I can say.” The declaration accepting the res olution was debated and being drafted by a committee for presenta tion to the plenary session of the Pal estine National Council, which be gan a four-day meeting in Algiers on Saturday. “The PNC will come out with a political decision and a program of peace,” PLO spokesman Ahmed Ab- dul-Rahman said. “In the political statement, we will adopt all resolutions of the U.N. Se curity Council dealing with the Pal estinian question. What’s more, we will emphasize resolutions 242 and 338 as the basis for an international conference to achieve peace in the Middle East.” Resolution 242 calls for an end to hostilities and Israeli withdrawal from territories occupied in the 1967 war. Adopted by the Security Council in 1967, it implicitly recog nizes Israel by referring to the right of all states in the area to live within secure and recognized borders. Resolution 338, passed in 1973 during the Arab-Israeli war, calls for an end to fighting; urges implemen tation of Resolution 242 and, most important, calls for negotiations be tween Arabs and Israel toward “a Amtrack’s Eagle line makes first run to CS College Station will be a “station” again today for the first time since 1958. Amtrak’s Texas Eagle line, on its first run, will stop at the city’s new train station on Marion Pugh Boule vard at 12:25 for an inaugural cere mony. Peggy Calliham, College Station public information officer, said the ceremony will begin at noon with music by the A&M Consolidated High School band. Speeches will be given by the Bryan and College Sta tion mayors, Chamber of Commerce President Bill Vance, Robert Smith, vice president of finance and opera tions, and an Amtrak representative. Fred Brown, College Station City Council member and liaison be tween Amtrak and College Station, will be master of ceremonies. Refreshments will be served, and a drawing will be held for free tick ets. The train, which will carry digni taries from Bryan, College Station, Dallas, Corsicana and Houston on its inaugural run, will leave for Hous ton at 12:55 p.m. The train will make its first public run Tuesday. It will head north to Corsicana, Dallas, St. Louis and Chi cago Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays and south to Houston Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Call 1- 800-USA-RAIL for ticket informa- tion and reservations. The regularly scheduled passen ger last train to stop in College Sta tion was the Southern Pacific Owl, which ran for 86 years. egistrar’s office releases final exam schedule omaU'i he Unis lio Sefi ch, CH and aft The last day of classes for the this semester will be j)ec. 7, and finals will begin Dec. 9. The registrar’s office released this semester’s final Examination schedule Friday. The revised schedule in cludes a “reading day” on Dec. 8. I Donald Carter, Texas A&M registrar, said University iPresident William Mobley approved the revised sched ule a week ago. The schedule allows faculty to submit degree candidates’ grades early so that most students ’ Expecting to graduate can receive certification before fommencement. Diplomas will be awarded at commencement ceremo- |iies to all students who have been certified, Carter said, list will be posted in Heaton Hall on the morning of ec. 16. “Every degree candidate may participate in gradua- [ion ceremonies,” Carter said. “However, those who are not clear — for whatever the reason — will have a letter in their (diploma) tube explaining why there isn’t a di ploma. These students will have until Friday during the first week of the spring semester to work things out.” Carter said each final examination will last no longer than two hours. He also gave other rules and proce dures: “Courses carrying one credit hour of theory or practice shall have one hour exams given during the last class period,” Carter said. “When a student is sched uled for three final examinations in one day, the stu dent may request of his or her dean rescheduling of one of the exams. The dean, department head and faculty member will make every effort to accommodate the stu dent when such a request is made.” Final examinations for classes meeting at times other than those listed below will be scheduled during the fi nal examination period at a time agreed upon by the faculty member and students, he said. The following is the final exam schedule for this semester. Friday, Dec. 9 Friday, Dec. 9 Friday, Dec. 9 Friday, Dec. 9 7:30 a.m.-9:30 a.in. 10 a.m.-12 noon 12:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m. 3 p.m.-5 p.m. MWF 4 and after MWF 8 TR 12:30-1:45 TR 11-12:15 Monday, Dec. 12 Monday, Dec. 12 Monday, Dec. 12 Monday, Dec. 12 8 a.m.-lO a.m. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 1 p.m.-3 p.m. 3:30 p.m.-:5:30 p.m. MWF 9 MWF 12 TR 8-9:15 MWF 3 Tuesday, Dec. 13 Tuesday, Dec. 13 Tuesday, Dec. 13 Tuesday, Dec. 13 8 a.m.-10 a.m. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 1 p.m.-3 p.m. 3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m. MWF 10 MWF 2 TR 3:30-4:45 MWF 1 Wednesday, Dec. 14 Wednesday, Dec. 14 Wednesday, Dec. 14 Wednesday, Dec. 14 8 a.m.-10 a.m. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 1 p.m.-3 p.m. 3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m. TR 9:30-10:45 MWF 11 TR 2-3:15 TR 5 and after just and durable peace in the Middle East.” In the closed-door committee meetings among PLO leaders, there was strong opposition to Resolution 242 from the Marxist-oriented groups, particularly George Ha- bash’s Popular Front for the Liber ation of Palestine. Habash’s faction is the second- largest of the eight groups compris ing the PLO. Arafat’s Fatah is the largest. Sources close to the talks said that after two days of haggling, it was clear no compromise was possible. Habash agreed to note his reser vations but bow to the majority and not create a major split. Salah Khalaf, a top Arafat aide known as Abu lyad, said, “Never in my career have I seen the Palestinian leadership acting as responsibly as it is during this session. Unity is a priority and the minority is accept ing the verdict of the majority with out any hard feelings.” The 450-member Palestinian council began meeting Saturday and is expected to conclude on Tuesday with a declaration of independence for the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In all previous meetings, the council has explicitly rejected Reso lution 242. Those opposed to Resolution 242 objected to.its referring to the future of Palestinians in the occupied terri tories as “a just settlement of the ref ugee problem.” The Algiers conference was called to deal with the new developments in the Middle East and especially to take advantage of increased atten tion and sympathy for the Palestin ian cause. Court orders A&M to pay GSS lawyers Texas A&M must pay almost $250,000 to lawyers who rep resented Gay Student Services in its court battle for recognition at A&M. U.S. District Judge Sim Lake or dered the award Thursday. The GSS applied for recognition by A&M in 1976. The University denied the request on the grounds that recognition would sanction and promote homosexual activities. Such activities were illegal in Texas in 1976. The GSS filed suit in 1977 against A&M. The case originally was dis missed, but the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Baton Rouge, La. or dered the case reinstated. U.S. Dis trict Judge Ross Sterling then ruled against the GSS. The group then appealed success fully to the 5th Court of Appeals. A&M appealed to the U.S. Su preme Court, but the court refused to hear the case, which meant the de cision by the 5th Court stood. A&M recognized the GSS in 1985. onference discusses job emigration to Mexico By Alan Sembera Senior Staff Writer and Juliette Rizzo Staff Writer For decades, millions of Mexican orkers have migrated to the United ^ yr States in search of better-paying jobs. - j But in a recent switch, jobs have begun moving south across the border in search WOU of lower-paid Mexican workers. J HI This emigration of jobs from the United States to Mexico was just one of the effects of Mexico’s “maquila” indus try discussed at an international confer- nce Thursday through Saturday at Texas A&M. 1 Students and faculty from more than 50 universities in the United States and + iir ex * co atten ded the conference, which I Igyas designed to educate the public about |lhe past and future effects of the maquila UfjU industry on the economies of both coun tries. I Maquiladoras are assembly plants in Mexico that offer foreign manufacturers . ii, tlie opportunity to take advantage of |3Pl! Mexico’s lower-paid work force. 1 Parts are manufactured in other coun- M iff' es — ‘ n l ar 8 e P art * n the United States * K~ anc * are 'roported into Mexico duty- ^^yfree for assembly. The finished products are then exported, and duties are paid inly for the value that has been added to lie parts. 1, j The maquila program provides many j ' |enefits to U.S. companies. Up Bill Wolfe, president of LINK, an in- dustrial management company in ig Brownsville that provides services and advice to companies in the maquila pro gram, explained some of the benefits. Wolfe said moving labor-intensive jobs to maquiladora plants offers another alternative to companies that are in dan ger of losing profits because of foreign competition. The other options, he said, are to sell the company while it is still worth some thing, to move jobs to the mostly non- unionized parts of the United States, or to move production to Asia. “These are options many people face on a daily basis,” Wolfe said. Moving the jobs to Mexico rather than to Asia saves more U.S. jobs, he said, because the parts still are manufactured in the United States under the maquila dora option. Mexico’s proximity to the United States also makes U.S. production of parts more viable, he said. Wolfe said that by locating labor-in tensive jobs in Mexico, U.S. companies can keep service-related jobs in the United States. The maquila program also offers many advantages to the Mexican economy. Lucinda Vargas, marketing research manager for a Mexican industrial devel opment group, listed the benefits and drawbacks of the program for Mexico. One of the most crucial benefits the maquila program offers Mexico, she said, is increased employment. More than 350,000 Mexicans are em ployed by the maquila industry, she said, and this number is increasing dramati cally. In 1987 alone, employment in the industry increased 22 percent, she said. Another major benefit, she said, is the transfer of “soft technology” from other countries. Soft technology includes the knowledge of work methods and produc tion systems. Foreign exchange is another crucial benefit that the maquila industry brings to Mexico, Vargas said. “Since 1985, the maquila industry has been the second largest source of hard currency in Mexico, following petro leum,” she said. Mexico is $104.5 billion in debt, and with low petroleum prices, foreign cur rency is in short supply. On the other hand, she said, the ma quila program has several drawbacks. One disadvantage is accelerated growth in Northern Mexico, she said. The infrastructures of the major cities are unable to handle the large influx of workers, she said, which creates traffic and telecommunication problems and a shortage of housing. Another major drawback, Vargas said, is the lack of integration between the maquila industry and the Mexican economy. She said less than 2 percent of the raw materials used in maquiladora plants originate in Mexico. Dr. Joseph Grunwald, former presi dent of the Institute of the Americas, said the maquila industry offers Mexico the chance to become a major player in the world economy. Grunwald, an expert on global trade and economics, said the import of U.S. technology and capital offers Mexico the chance to follow the development path of Asian countries such as South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. These Asian countries developed in dustrially, he said, because the United States took advantage of the cheap labor there much the way it uses the U.S.- Mexican border area today. “After the United States was the un disputed economic leader in the world after the second world war,” Grunwald said, “competition reemerged with the recovery of Europe and with the recov ery of Japan. “When the United States then found it self in an international market in which it had to compete with low-cost producers, it looked for ways in which it could cut down its production costs. “It came upon the idea of slicing up production processes into labor-intensive processes and capital- or knowledge-in tensive processes, and then sending the labor-intensive processes abroad.” Grunwald said the United States first went to Asia instead of Latin America because labor costs were much lower. “It wasn’t called maquiladora, but that’s in fact what they were,” he said. Grunwald said these Asian countries began supplying components in increas ing proportions and started becoming op erators of their own assembly plants. Soon they were able to produce a use ful product by themselves, he said. “They sucked up the technology that was inherent in the maquiladora because Joseph Grunwald some of the maquiladoras are very so phisticated,” Grunwald said. “They used the maquiladoras as a springboard for ex porting and for using high levels of tech nology in production for their own local markets.” He said the offshoot plants have not yet developed in Mexico because Mexi cans until recently had considered the maquila industry undignified and not an activity that would lead to industrializa Photo by Dean Saito tion. “They felt as if they were taking in someone else’s dirty laundry,” he said. Mexican capitalists found it much eas ier to produce for the local, protected market, he said. It was much easier than meeting the delivery schedules and stan dards of quality control that are nec essary for exporting, he said. But today, he said, Mexico’s ailing economy is forcing Mexican capitalists to look outward for avenues of growth.