A&M 'he Battalion WEATHER FORECAST for FRIDAY: Cloudy, becoming partly cloudy in afternoon, with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunder storms HIGH:85 LOW:62 /ci. Mo 147 USPS C4S360 14 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, May 4,1989 A&M takes another step in fusion experiment FROM STAFF & WIRE REPORTS Another step in the direction of “cold” fu sion was taken at Texas A&M Wednesday when Dr. John Appleby, director of the Electrochemical Systems and Hydrogen Re search Center, said experiments with a mi cro calorimeter, which measures heat out put, showed for the first time that ^palladium and heavy water are crucial for producing excess energy. Two other groups of scientists at A&M also have confirmed part of the results of Utah researchers, producing excess energy from the apparatus, college officials said Wednesday. “Experiments are in progress to deter mine the critical parameters that govern the generation of excess heat,” Appleby said in a statement. Last month, researchers of A&M’s Texas Engineering Experiment Station Thermo dynamics Research Center first announced they had confirmed part of the findings of the University of Utah group that earlier claimed to have produced so-called “cold” fusion in a lab experiment. The findings by B. Stanley Pons, chair man of the Utah chemistry department, and Martin Fleischmann of the University of Southampton, England, sent scientists around the world scrambling with their March 23 announcement of the fusion re action. up; E-xpenments are in progress to determine the critical parameters that govern the generation of excess heat.” — Dr. John Appleby research director Last week, Appleby’s group also an nounced it had produced excess energy in another experiment. And a third group at A&M headed by Dr. John Bockris, distin guished professor of chemistry, has yielded similar results. “Basically, the bottom line is that a sec ond A&M group confirmed what is being called the ‘Pons-Fleischmann effect’ — ex cess energy being generated (from the ex periment) and are the first to indicate that only heavy water and palladium will pro duce this excess energy in an experimental setting,” A&M spokesman Ed Walraven said. “The third group is also producing ex cess energy but they don’t feel like they are producing a sufficient amount in that they yet have publishable results,” he said. “They are getting lower levels than the other two groups. In essence, all three are producing excess energy. Some is higher than in others and that has to be explai ned.” Walraven said Dr. Supramania Sriniva- san, a senior researcher in Appleby’s group and assistant director of the electrochemical and hydrogen center, will present some of the results this weekend at an Electrochemi cal Society meeting in Los Angeles. Physicists meeting this week at the Amer ican Physical Society in Baltimore have been highly critical of the fusion research. They maintain that the original experiment and the confirmations suffer from im- See Fusion/Page 4 Weather poses )2j only threat to repaired shuttle H CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — If |fe The countdown marched smoothly IB Wednesday toward a second attempt II to launch the shuttle Atlantis with a jBcrew of five and a space probe des- Ifl lined for Venus. NASA’s only worry liters || was a worsening weather forecast. IS I ‘ n a ^’ things look good for a fl 1:48 p.m. launch tomorrow (Thurs- IB day) and the start of our trip to Ve- bm! nus,” launch test director Albert «kB Sofge said of shuttle preparations. iniia The weather outlook, however, was not promising, with forecasters saying Wednesday afternoon there was a 40 percent chance that either rain or high winds would prevent a launch during the available 64-min ute launch period. That was up from 30 percent in the morning and 20 percent two days ago. The first launch attempt last Fri day was aborted just 31 seconds be fore the planned liftoff because of a I short circuit in a fuel pump. NASA said the delay cost about $300,000. The mission to take the Magellan spacecraft into orbit will revive a U.S. planetary program that has- been dormant since the launch of Pi- oneer-Venus in 1978. “After an 11-year gap in the plan etary program, we’re anxious to get See Shuttle/Page 4 S. Korean riots prompt warning from president Senior splash Walter Giroir (left) and David Marshall (right) and three other nuclear engineering seniors graduating this spring celebrate Photo by Fredrick D.Joe their freedom Wednesday in the fountain at Zachry Engineering Center. SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — President Roh Tae-woo on Wednes day threatened to invoke emergency E owers, which could mean martial iw, if students and workers con tinue the kind of violent protest in which six riot policemen were killed. He said his government was de termined to stop the wave of radical protest that has battered South Ko rea in recent weeks, but he did not outline specific action in a televised speech to the nation. “If violence and illegal acts endan ger democracy and the future of the country, I would be obliged to in voke emergency measures as em powered by the constitution,” he said. South Korea’s constitution per mits the president to rule by decree or impose martial law in cases of emergency. Roh’s warning responded to the killing of six riot troopers early Wednesday at Dongui University in Pusan, a southern stronghold of the opposition. People seldom are killed in South Korean protests. Riot officers wear protective helmets and shields, along with fireproof fatigues, and nor mally are armed only with tear gas and batons. The six who died were set afire when they broke into a room on the 1 seventh floor of the university li brary to free five comrades held hos tage. They were the first policemen killed since a riot officer died in June 1987. Authorities said students seized the hostages Tuesday after a violent demonstration against the firing of warning shots by police on Monday when protesters menaced a police station. Mobley: Bush library, state support crucial % iN UNIVERSITY NEWS SERVICE While President Bush’s visit and a proposal to locate the presidential li brary on Texas A&M’s campus are attracting widespread attention, the battle for more state support for higher education and a commmit- ment to excellence in the classroom are crucial, Texas A&M University President William Mobley said Wednesday in his first “state of the University” address. “We are pleased that President Bush has selected Texas A&M as one of the four universities at which he will speak to graduates during his first year in office,” Mobley told fac ulty and administrators at the an nual spring faculty and staff meet ing. “Let me also note that we are pro ceeding with developing a formal proposal to locate the Bush Presi dential Library at Texas A&M,” he added, pointing out that an external committee, chaired by Michel Hal- bouty of Houston and involving other prominent alumni, is meeting regularly. President William H. Mobley “With good input from faculty and students, particularly from the colleges of Architecture and Liberal Arts, a preliminary proposal is tak ing shape,” Mobley said. “Although a decision on the location will be well into the future, we will be well pre pared. “On another subject — one of in tense interest to the entire Univer sity community — the Texas Legis lature is approaching a critical stage in its deliberations,” he said. Mobley reported that the confer ence committee is working to recon cile the differences in the House and Senate versions of the appropria tions bill for the next two fiscal years. “The good news is that both bills are far better than the original Leg islative Budget Board recommenda tions,” he continued. “And there is some speculation that the State Comptroller will certify, before the end of the legislative session, that ad ditional revenues will be available in the coming biennium, thus provid ing additional funds for appropria tion.” He said the Senate appropriations bill comes closer to meeting the Uni versity’s needs than the House ver sion, and calls for 7.1 percent in ap propriations for faculty salary increases each year and 4 percent in the appropriations for staff salaries. “You may be assured that the ap propriations bill is receiving top priority of the administration, and will continue to get priority attention through the closing weeks of the leg islative session,” he said. In addition, Mobley called for continued cooperation to increase private support for the institution and continued excellence in the classroom. “We must continue to exercise ex cellence in the classroom,” Mobley said. “You will likely hear me men tion this often in the months ahead — I will mention it often, for we must never lose sight of the reason Texas A&M was established and the reason for the trust that the citizens of Texas have placed in our hands. “Please understand that when I speak of excellence in education, I am referring to our responsibilities to young people in the broadest sen se,” he said. As a highlight to the annual meet ing, Mobley’s first as president, 21 distinguished service awards spon sored by the Association of Former Students were presented. I I STAFF WRITER I A&M, BISD to become magnet school partners By Melissa Naumann zn Texas A&M and the Bryan Independent School District will become partners in a magnet school for science and math if the U.S. Depart ment of Education approves a joint proposal for the establishment of such a school. Dr. Peter McIntyre, A&M physics professor | and member of the task force that determined the feasibility of the magnet school, said plans for the school will proceed even though the College | Station Independent School District w ill not par ticipate initially. The College Station school board voted not to participate in the magnet school, but McIntyre said plans remain virtually unchanged. “It has not been delayed —just shifted slightly in focus,” McIntyre said. “It’s gone from a three- way project to a two-way project.” Dr. Guy Gorden, Bryan school superinten dent, said if the schools receive the $600,000 grant from the Department of Education, the magnet school will open in Fall 1990. Gorden said the magnet school would serve fewer students because College Station has de cided not to participate. The school would be open to students in surrounding school districts, but the schools outside of BlSD must make fi nancial contributions in order for their students to attend. The magnet school would be a four-year pub lic high school concentrating on preparing stu dents for careers in science and technology. It would be open to students who have above aver age scores on skills tests, McIntyre said. “It’s not an elitist institution,” McIntyre said. Opponents of the magnet school say it would rob other schools of their top students, but McIn tyre disagrees. “It’s for students who are high achievers and want and need the ambience this school can pro- See Education/Page 4 Educational progress stagnant nationwide r WASHINGTON (AP) — Spending on education is up but progress is at a standstill, Educa tion Secretary Lauro Cavazos said Wednesday in releasing a report See related story/Page 3 card that rates the nation’s stu dents as “merely average.” “We are standing still, and the problem is that it’s been this way for three years in a row,” Cavazos said. “Frankly, the situation scares me.” The figures show a decline this year in the national high school graduation rate and falling scores on college entrance exams in half the states. In reaction, the Council of Chief State School Officers, while acknowledging that “the task ahead is gigantic,” noted that 44 of the 50 states have made college entrance test gains since 1982 and 38 states have improved their high school completion rates since then. If educational progress has stagnated, the Education Depart ment’s chart shows the same can not be said of per-pupil spending. The national average was $3,977 per student in 1988, up from $3,165 in 1982 — a 26 percent hike. NWe are already spending more money per student than our major foreign competitors, Japan and Germany,” Cavazos said. “And yet our students con sistently fall behind the competi tion in competitive testing. Money alone is not the answer to our education deficit.” Cavazos said he would urge state school chiefs, governors and Lauro Cavazos school board presidents to adopt specific goals such as boosting high school graduation rates to 90 percent and cutting in half the number of children who fail a grade. Specifically, the department’s chart shows that national scores on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) fell from an average of 906 to 904 (on a scale of 400 to 1,600) from 1987 to 1988. Scores on the American College Testing Pro gram (ACT), marked on a scale of 1 to 36, showed a scant 0.1- point gain. The high school grad uation rate rose from 69.5 per cent in 1982 to 71.7 percent in 1985. But it edged down in 1986 to 71.6 percent and dropped to 71.1 percent in 1987, the latest year for which such statistics could be calculated. The National Education Asso ciation issued a statement saying it agreed that U.S. schools are stagnating. But the teacher union said Cavazos is wrong to minimize money as a factor for im provement, and it attributed the stagnation problem to federal cutbacks in programs for the dis advantaged.