WEATHER board )allas qualifier Texas A&M The Battalion FORECAST for TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy and turning cooler during the day with winds becom ing northerly. HIGH:65 LOW:48 long). -om Southern Meth- m\ Oklahoma, Okla- Southwest Texas and [. Baylor placed sec- U was third, district dinghy qual- Tulane University team member Jeff ts nominated for the ates Yacht Racing i-Alan Charck Sports- .ward for intercolle- ►vinter tourney >phomores David Be nd Jimmy Linehan. yet s scored in double the tournament. De- idouts were freshmen lerman and William merman provided key Baker, although not talie, made some out- ocks and outlet passes flense. i regional contest i’s team started off by exas Tech 29-4. The got tougher when the ). 1 team, Colorado ed the Aggies 25-9. mded back with a 22- SMU to win third : tourney and gain a national tournament rge. Pa. March 5-11. irnament laced third in the 172- tes John Hughes and aidt look second in ons, Hughes in the 9-pound class and i the women’s 150- that his players are jus n in shorts. Idn’t cave into Dantley's loldout, putting him bad e block. iarter has Finally learned bottomline business, and lat “family" folly. eff Millar & Bill Hinds t COVE R3R -TUEJR Ll/S ipair on all tWD's. 3S ’College) 775-6708 r 7 years INC. & BNR 1 NERSHIP ’, 1889 M04B sion of Computer 9ss Disciplines. onal details. >PIES FALION Vol. 88 No. 104 USPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Monday, February 27,1989 There she is ... Dr. John Koldusjsresents the Miss TAMU tro- auditorium. Hopkins is a sophomore elemen- phy to Amy Hopkins Saturday night in Rudder tary education major from Hurst. See related story/Page 3 A&M leads state rates in minority retention By Ashley A. Bailey STAFF WRITER This year marks the fourth that Texas A&M’s minority retention rates led those of other public insti tutions in the state. As reported by the University’s Office of Public Information (OPI), A&M had 86.4 percent of its under graduate black students who en rolled for fall classes in 1986 return for Fall 1987 classes. The figure was 87.4 percent for Hispanic under graduates. Edwin Cooper, director of the A&M office of school relations, said in a July article in The Battalion that A&M has been involved actively in minority recruitment since 1979 and has made great progress. Recruiting is important as an ini tial endeavor, Cooper said, but re tention is actually the key to A&M’s recruiting success. Donald Carter, the University’s registrar, said A&M, along with ev ery other state school, just com pleted a five-year Office of Civil Rights desegregation plan with pub lic higher education students in Texas. The plan ran from 1983 to 1987. “Required reports prepared for the Coordinating Board compare enrollment of blacks and Hispanics against the enrollment of white stu dents from one fall semester to the next fall semester,” Carter said. “Provided the information that’s called for in those reports, A&M did have one of the higher retention rates of blacks and Hispanics as com pared to other schools.” Carter said, however, that the plan and its results are not represen tative of following the st udents from enrollment through graduation. “The way they’re doing it, in my opinion, is not a true retention stu dy,’ he said, l b me, a true reten tion study is where you take a group of students as they enter the pro gram as freshmen and you follow that group for five years to see how many actually graduate.” Enrollment is a relatively easy step, he said. It’s graduation that should be focused on — for all stu dents. “Our purpose is to get all students out of the system with degrees,” he said. “Graduation goes hand-in- hand with retention of students. If you have a higher retention rate, then there’s a valid assumption that if they (students) stay in the system they are progressing and will grad uate.” Carter said the good base of mi nority students at A&M is a positive influence on getting other minority group members to attend the Uni versity. A&M President William H. Mob ley said in an OPI statement, “We are obviously pleased to continue to have the state’s best record for stu dent retention — overall in both the black and Hispanic student catego ries. “I attribute that success to our WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Lloyd Bentsen says he is drafting legislation to set up a pilot program of “boot camps” within the federal prison system in an attempt to ease overcrowding without the high costs of building standard prisons. Bentsen said Saturday the pro posed boot camp prisons would be for young, first-offenders of non-vi olent crimes, and would be modeled after boot camps used by the mili tary. As mqny as 1,224 offenders ad mitted to federal institutions in 1986 fit the criteria for boot camp eligibil ity, he said. “They would require long hours, hard work, but the sentence would ability to attract well-qualified and serious students and high-quality, caring faculty and support staff who work closely with the students in at tainment of their educational and leadership-development goals,” Mobley said. Carter said that with the comple tion of the fifth year of SIMS (Stu dent Information Management Sys tem), he will do a true retention study — from enrollment to gradua tion. Black retention rates of state insti tutions with the next-highest rates are the University of Texas, 81.9 percent; East Texas State University, 76.3 percent; and the University of North Texas, 67.2 percent. Hispanic retention rates were UT, 81.1 per cent; UNT, 76.8 percent; and ETSU 74.7 percent. The statewide average for black retention of undergraduate students was 63.6 percent, while the average for Hispanic student retention was 68.8 percent. be somewhat shorter,” Bentsen, a Texas Democrat, said. “Clearly our federal prisons have inmates who could benefit from the boot camp approach.” Bentsen said the federal prison system is “severely overcroweded” and the inmate population could triple over the next eight years, prompting him to seek low-cost solu tions to provide additional prison beds. “The problem you’re running into is you have about 50 percent more prisoners than you really have room for in federal institutions to day,” Bentsen said. “So this would be a means of trying to cut down on the cost, try to provide some additional facilities.” Bentsen suggests plan for prison ‘boot camps’ Mobley approves co-ed honors dormitory By Sherri Roberts STAFF WRITER An honors coeducational dormitory will be among the new residence halls opening to students in Fall 1989 at Texas A&M. A&M President William Mobley approved a resolution to designate the newly con structed modular hall near McFadden and Haas halls as an honors residence hall. Eighty percent of the hall’s 202 spaces will be allocated to freshmen recipients of either the President’s Endowed, Lechner or McFad den scholarships, Dale Knobel, director of the University Honors Program, said. The re maining 20 percent of the spaces will be as signed to upperclassmen recipients of these scholarships. The procedure for freshmen and upper classmen to apply for residency in the hall will be announced later this semester, he said. The hall will be operated by the Residence Hall Association and will differ from other residence halls only in its programming, which will be coordinated through the Hon ors Program office, Knobel said. Academic programs relating to expected topics of interest to the honors students, such as study skills, will be sponsored by the hall. In addition, faculty members will advise resi dents on an informal basis, he said. “These students will not be coddled,” Kno bel said. “They will be challenged by the activ ities in the hall.” Though the hall’s programming will be geared primarily to its residents, it also will sponsor programs which will be open to the public, he said. Representatives of the Honors Program are planning to have the hall sponsor infor mal meetings between students and various speakers, dignitaries and artists visiting cam pus, he said. Minor modifications will be made to the hall to accommodate its programming. At an estimated cost of $7,500, the third floor study lounge will be converted to a meeting/semi nar room, and the first floor storage room will be converted to the Honors Student Council/Hall Council office. Knobel said response to the hall has been positive from honor students at A&M, as well as from high school students who have been extended scholarships to attend A&M. It is expected that 165 of the 400 high school students who have been offered sholarships at A&M for 1989-90 will choose to live in the hall, he said. This number is based on 1987 figures, which indicate 164 scholarship holders ac cepted non-Corps of Cadets hall assignments, while 28 chose to live off campus. Scholarship recipients will not be required to live in the honors hall. Some may opt to live in a less expensive hall, Knobel said. Like other modular halls, the cost of living in the honors hall in Fall 1989 will be $909 a semester per student. Although scholarship recipients are guar anteed on-campus housing for four years, those choosing to live in the honors hall will be guaranteed a space in that particular hall for their freshman year only. After their freshman year, they must apply for one of the select spaces in the hall allotted to upperclass men. Knobel said the hall will be an effective tool to recruit scholarship recipients to A&M. In 1988, 60 percent of those offered schol arships to attend A&M accepted. It is difficult to attract these students be cause they usually receive numerous schol arship offers, he said. If the honors hall is successful in attracting an increased number of high-achieving stu dents to A&M, the entire University will ben efit indirectly, Knobel said. “It enhances Texas A&M’s reputation,” he said. This, in turn, will attract more recruiters and faculty to campus, in addition to making a degree from A&M more valuable in the job market, he said. Mobley approved the resolution to have a co-ed honors hall at A&M based on a report compiled by a 13-member Honors Program committee, which he appointed in Fall 1988. Committee members included various stu dent and faculty members connected with the honors program, representatives of RHA and Dr. John Koldus, vice president for student services. Tower: If confirmed I will not take a drink Khomeini calls for ties with Moscow to increase WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary-designate John Tower said Sunday he is not an alcoholic and issued an extraordinary pledge not to take a single drink if he is con firmed by the Senate to head the Pentagon. As Tower defended his reputa tion in nationally televised inter views, Senate Armed Services Com mittee Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga., accused the White House of leaking information from the FBI report on Tower and threatened to reopen the hearings on the nomination and sub poena anonymous witnesses quoted in the agency review. The committee voted 11-9 along party lines last Thursday to recom mend that the full Senate reject Tower’s nomination, with Nunn cit ing allegations of excessive drinking by the nominee. In his first interview since the vote, Tower denied he was an alco holic, and with his unusual promise sought to allay fears among his for mer colleagues and remove the obstacles to his confirmation. The full Senate is expected to take up the nomination on Wedriesday. “Noting the principal concern of Senator Nunn and other members of the Senate relative to my confir mation as secretary of Defense, namely the extent to which I may en gage in excessive use of beverage al cohol, let me state that I have never been an alcoholic nor dependent on alcohol,” Tower said in a statement he read on ABC-TV’s “This Week With David Brinkley.” “I hearby swear and undertake that if confirmed, during the course of my tenure as Secretary of De fense, I will not consume beverage alcohol of any type or form, includ ing wine, beer or spirits of any kind,” he said. Tower distributed copies of the statement after reading it on the air. It was signed by Tower and wit nessed by his doctor at Baylor Uni versity, Dr. Warren Lichliter, and Department of Transportation Sec retary Samuel K. Skinner. Tower also vowed that if he broke his pledge not to drink, he would step down. “I think I’d be obliged to resign if I broke the pledge,” the former Battalion file photo John Tower Texas senator said. “I’ve never bro ken a pledge in my life.” In the interview. Tower read a portion of a letter from Lichliter that said tests conducted prior to his sur gery to remove a colon polyp found normal liver functions and that there was no evidence of alcohol withdrawal following the operation. “Based on this fact that can be stated with relative certainty, Senator Tower shows no evidence at all of al coholic impairment or alcoholism,” the letter said. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Aya tollah Ruhollah Khomeini said Sun day he wants strong ties with Mos cow to help fight the “devilish” West, and Iranian legislators reportedly agreed to consider breaking ties with Britain. Khomeini’s overtures to the Soviet Union, which he previously con demned for its atheist ideology, came during a one-and-a-half hour meeting with Soviet Foreign Min ister Eduard Shevardnadze. It was believed to be the first pri vate meeting between Iran’s 88-year- old revolutionary patriarch and a foreign minister, according to Iran’s official Islamic Republic News Agency. IRNA said Shevardnadze did not ask Khomeini to withdraw his order for Moslem zealots to assassinate British author Salman Rushdie be cause of his book “The Satanic Verses.” Britain reportedly asked Shevardnadze to press Khomeini to give a reprieve to Rushdie, whose book has been denounced as insult ing to Islam. “There was no mention of the af fair in Shevardnadze’s speech,” said IRNA, monitored in Nicosia. The meeting with Shevardnadze came two days after Khomeini de clared Iran does not need relations with the West. This issue has divided the Tehran hierarchy between so- called pragmatists, who favor more relations with the rest of the world, and hardliners, who favor continued isolation. Rushdie has been in hiding since Khomeini’s Feb. 14 execution order, and Iranian religious leaders put a $5.2 million bounty on his head. In protest, Britain withdrew all its diplomats from its embassy in Teh ran, which had been reopened in December after an earlier rift of more than a year. It also asked Ira nian diplomats to leave London. The 11 other European Commu nity countries as well as Norway, Sweden and Canada, recalled their top diplomats from Iran, and Teh ran brought its ambassadors home. No diplomatic ties have been for mally broken. But religious leaders in Tehran last week called for a break with Britain. The English-language Tehran Times said Sunday hostile relations with the West stemming from the Rushdie novel opened “all doors” to improving ties with Moscow. FBI agents protect research in Houston HOUSTON (AP) — FBI agents are quietly fighting a large- scale counterespionage battle in Houston against spies for foreign governments. The agency has made the ef fort its top priority, fearing these spies are monitoring technologi cal, medical and energy research in Houston, said Andrew J. Duf- fin, special agent in charge of the Houston office. Guarding against secret for eign infiltration of the massive su perconductor project at the Uni versity of Houston has been one of the agency’s efforts, the pro ject’s director, Paul Chu, told the Houston Post. An FBI spokesman, Johnie Joyce, called the foreign intelli gence effort the “No. 1 priority” of the local office. “Our commitment in terms of agents and other resources com mitted to foreign counterintelli gence is far and away greater than what is committed to any other single priority program,” Joyce said. He declined to say how many of the bureau’s estimated 200 agents work on spy cases, but Duffin said the number rep resents less than 50 percent of the force. Duffin cited several of Hous ton’s high-profile industries as likely targets of foreign spies. They include NASA, the Texas Medical Center, the oil industry and local universities. He also pointed to the large number of foreign consultants and the ex change student population as po tential sources of foreign agents. “These make for fertile areas for . . . representatives of foreign governments not all that friendly with the United States,” Duffin said. Duffin agreed a “spy vs. spy” situation is being played out in Houston. He said his agency is fighting against known or sus pected foreign agents, foreign agents in Houston illegally and, hypothetically, double agents who could be working for both sides.