Texas A&M The Battalion WEATHER FORECAST for WEDNESDAY: Mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. HIGH:90s LOW :70s Vol. 88 No. 153 USPS 045360 8 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, June 13,1989 i An deim still 1. in j rtair l 3,1 tiilct »n tti 'ledn ns die rabfi w bod- f is 'Ugfe iad« ce vs sprc; 'peot tncei rude: ewst: R ChiH ith A&M lecturer left Tiananmen 1 hour before shooting began By Mia B. Moody STAFF WRITER lianvi The Tiananmen Square mas sacre turned what should have been a routine business trip into a scary event for an A&M lecturer who was two miles away from the bloody tragedy. Lawrence Wolken, a lecturer in the business department, went to Beijing with the intention of dis cussing and setting up programs on how to improve trade relations and joint ventures with China, but ended up escaping a massacre by one hour. “I had no idea that a massacre would occur in Beijing,” Wolken said. “1 knew what was going on, but I thought that there was little risk because I had seen the peo ple of Beijing stopping troops on television.” Wolken said the Square was calm when he was there an hour before the massacre began. “I was in the Square at 7 p.m.,” he said. “It was crowded not only with students, but also with chil- Photo by Kathy Ha veman Lawrence Wolken dren and the elderly. When I left the Square at 8 p.m., I ran into a large group of people who were blocking army trucks. In this group, vendors were selling hot dogs and drinks, people were talking to the troops, and chil dren were sitting on the troop’s tanks. As far as I could see, the troops had no weapons and ev erything was just fine.” Wolken said he felt differently later that night when he talked to his daughter on the phone. “My daughter was supposed to come to China, so I was calling her to say it was OK for her to come,” he said. “She told me she had heard that shots had been fired in Tiananmen Square. I told her that was probably a minor oc currence and that it would still be safe for her to come. I was mis taken.” Wolken found out about the massacre, two miles away from him, by watching Cable News Network. He knew more about what was going on than other people in China who didn’t have satellite television. Wolken said once the massacre began, he stayed away from Tia nanmen Square. “I could tell that everything was out of control,” he said. “Sol diers were shooting at anything that moved. I was supposed to move to a different motel the next day, but I decided to stay where I was.” That night Wolken decided to cut his two-week trip short and to come back to College Station. “I made reservations the next day,” he said. “I spent the night in the airport and flew home the next day.” Wolken said he believes the U.S. Embassy did little to help Americans. “Other embassies reacted quicker and did more to help their people than the U.S.’s did,” Wolken said. “I didn’t even bother to leave my name with the U.S. Embassy because I remem ber how inadequately they helped me three years ago w’hen I was there. The people who did leave their names were given little help. They were told that everything was OK, and they could use their airplane tickets to come home. I had sense enough to come home immediately.” Bush unveils plan to remove smog, reduce acid rain WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush, declaring too many Americans “breathe dirty air,” un veiled an ambitious plan Monday to E urge urban smog from most cities y the year 2000 and to sharply re duce acid-rain pollution. Environmentalists praised his ef fort but said he should go further. The coal industry said he was trying “too much too soon.” To curb smog-producing ozone. Bush recommended that automak ers be required to build and sell methanol-powered cars in nine ur ban areas plagued by dirty air. And he recommended that limits on tail pipe emissions of ozone-producing hydrocarbons in existing cars be tightened by almost 40 percent. Bush also proposed a 10-million- ton reduction in sulfur dioxide emis sions from coal-burning power plants, a major cause of acid rain. If achieved, that would be a 50 percent cut. Moreover, he said industry should be required to use new technology to curb the release of cancer-causing toxic chemicals into the air. Bush outlined his legislative pack age at the White House in a speech i mi' * 1 (hen :ach: broii ownt ingP bus' China intensifies crackdown; U.S. harbors dissidents BEIJING (AP) — The govern ment on Monday gave police and soldiers permission to shoot people who stir unrest and banned all inde pendent student and worker groups as it intensified its crackdown on the pro-democracy movement. China’s hardline leaders also re newed criticism of the United States for harboring two prominent dissi- ’■dents in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing fand broadcast their pictures on na tional television. “Don’t let these people flee,” an announcer said. “They are wanted for counterrevolutionary crimes.” In Washington, the Bush adminis tration indicated that it would not al low authorities to arrest the two, as trophysicist Fang Lizhi and his wife, Beijing University assistant profes sor Li Shuxian. The standoff has further chilled once-warm relations between the nations. Security forces made hundreds of new arrests, including several lead ers of independent labor unions, bringing the number of arrested to more than 1,000 across the country, according to Chinese media reports. All the developments pointed to a strengthening of the government’s effort to suppress the student-led movement for a freer society and an end to official corruption. The crackdown began June 3 when thousands of soldiers from the People’s Liberation Army invaded Beijing and marched on Tiananmen Square, which was occupied by thou sands of students. The Chinese government says only 300 people were killed, mostly soldiers. See related story/Page 8 In memory of... Huawei Qiu and Sun Zhong, graduate students from Beijing, stand next to a memorial for their friend Xiao Bo during a candle- Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack light vigil Saturday night in front of the Academic Building. Xiao was killed during the military assault on protesters in Beijing. to members of Congress, governors, and industry and environmental groups. Later, keeping the focus on the environment, he was heading to Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming for a first-hand look at damage from the fires that black ened nearly half of the park’s 2.2 million acres last year. William Reilly, chief of the Envi ronmental Protection Agency, said cleaning the air “will neither be free nor easy.” For example, electric bills are expected to increase by 2 percent in some states to clean up coal-fired electric plants. At a briefing before Bush’s speech, Reilly estimated the overall program would cost between $ 14 bil lion and $19 billion a year Richard Ayres, chairman ot the National Clean Air Coalition, said Bush’s plan had strong provisions for dealing with acid rain. However, in the area of urban smog, he said he was concerned that not enough was being proposed to deal with pollut ion from existing gasoline-powered See related story/Page 3 Foreign press faces danger, fear in China BEIJING (AP) — Foreign report ers covering China’s crackdown on pro-democracy protesters no longer have bullets whizzing past their heads, but some said Monday their job has become harder in the grow ing climate of fear. Television crews have had their film or equipment confiscated and been forced to write “self-criticisms.” Other reporters have been stopped by police from talking to people on the street or have had notebooks taken. A British reporter was ex pelled from Shanghai. The Australian Embassy ex pressed grave concern Monday over the safety of its country’s journalists, saying, “From what we’ve seen the last few days we can’t seriously ex pect the police or troops to be fussy about who they shoot.” Sources also are drying up. Chinese people said they fear talking to reporters even in private as the number of reported arrests in con nection with seven weeks of pro-de mocracy protests neared 1,000. “You have to be so careful,” said Jan Wong of the Toronto Globe and Mail. “I don’t want to ask people (on the street) their names . . . for their protection.” TV crews that already were taking precautions when shooting photo graphs to avoid detection by security officials said a new damper was put on their work by the government use of an ABC videotape to track down a Chinese man. China Central Television appar ently intercepted the unedited video as ABC sent it by satellite to New York. stic son* Iisr Faculty Senate calls for insurance counseling service By Kelly S. Brown SENIOR STAFF WRITER E The Faculty Senate Monday ap- ; proved a resolution creating a Bene- Kits Counseling Service to help em- 1 ployees of the Texas A&M System vvho find it difficult to decide which insurance benefits will optimize their pverage. I The resolution, which came from I pie Personnel and Welfare Commit- lee, stated that because many em ployees experience frustration in at tempting to exercise their options ■md in significant cases make deci- ■ions which do not optimize their ■overage, such a counseling service ■s necessary. I Another resolution approved ■rom the Personnel and Welfare Committee recommended the Sys- ■em Benefit Office look at establish- png a Preferred Provider Organiza- Bon, which is an institute that ■ssures a lower group medical cost HE By contracting with selected health ^ Care providers in the Bryan-College Station area. I A need exsists for such an insti tute because health care providers are often charged fees beyond what ON is considered reasonable and cus- ijpmary, according to the resolution. Chancellor says he will move office off campus By Kelly S. Brown SENIOR STAFF WRITER Dr. Perry L. Adkisson, chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, said Monday he plans to move his office from the Texas A&M campus to a “more neutral” location in hopes of ending the confusion about the relationship between the president of A&M and the system chancellor. Adkisson said he believes that because his of fice and that of the president are both on cam pus, people aren’t clear about which role is which. An example Adkisson gave of the confusion between the offices of the president and of the chancellor is when people want to go to “the top person in charge. “The chancellor is the chief executive office of the TAMUS,” Adkisson said. “My role is to look at the scope of the University, its goals, to deal with the legislature and fiscal aspects, as well as to carry out basic policy and appoint CEO’s. “My job is not to oversee the day-to-day opera tions of the University,” he said. He said he has had good relationships with former President Frank Vandiver and President William Mobley, and in order to maintain the harmony it’s necessary for him to vacate the Sys tem Administration Building, probably around 1991. “And in the future maybe even further,” he said, “to Austin or Houston.” When Adkisson addressed the Senate, he dis cussed three points, the first being state appro priations. “We didn’t do as well as I would have liked,” Adkisson said, “but we received a larger increase than most universities. A&M received a 12 per cent increase, whereas the University of Texas received a nine percent increase. “My number one goal as chancellor was to re store funding to what it was in 1985, and we have done that,” he said. Other news Adkisson delivered was that fac ulty salaries were raised five percent for 1990, and three percent for 1991. “This isn’t as much as we wanted,” he said. “The Coordinating Board asked for 10 percent. Had the governor approved a cigarrette tax, we might have gotten more than a five percent in crease, but he was against the tax.” Adkisson said he hopes the expansion of the TAMUS continues past the recent mergers with the University System of South Texas. “There may be more mergers in the future, but we also need to look at, and appeal to, a broader ethnic group,” he said. Adkisson mentioned the long-range planning of the University needs to be prioritized because, “we can’t do it all.” one of the following subject areas: history, philosophy, literature, the arts, culture or language. The course also should demonstrate one or more of the following objectives: seek to recover, transmit, anaylze and interpret artistic or creative ex pressions of human culture; develop an appreciation for and an ability to analyze or interpret aesthetic struc tures; promote self awareness, self analysis, or the ability for ethical rea soning; promote an understanding of the historical context of science, the arts or culture; and promote a philosophical understanding of the principles of science, the arts or cul ture. In other meeting action, the Sen ate approved the following additions to the Core Curriculum Guidelines: • That a given course normally be included in no more than one cat egory of the Core Curriculum. • That the category Cultural Heritage be changed to Humanities to represent more accurately the na ture of the courses in this category. • That no course be included in the Core Curriculum in the Human ities or Social Sciences areas which is concerned predominantly with voca tional training. • That no student be permitted to satisfy all Core course require ments in the categories of Humani ties and Social Sciences by courses having the same prefix. Two guidelines approved are in tended for the use of submitters and the members of the Core Curric ulum Oversight Committee: • To be included in the Core Curriculum in the category of Hu manities a course should address • To be included in the Core Curriculum in the category of Social Sciences, a course should address one of the following subject areas: anthropology, economics, political science, geography, psychology, so ciology, or communication. A course also must demonstrate one or both of the following objec tives, according to the guidelines: promote a scientific or analytical study of social institutions and/or the behavior of individuals or groups in relation to these institutions, and See Senate/Page 7