Texas A&M Battalion WEATHER FORECAST for FRIDAY: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thundershowers in the afternoon. HIGH: 90s LOW: 70s ac c Vol. 88 No. 170 USPS 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, July 13,1989 s ‘cle two f, Congress |, hng the lillion to r reads au ghter frj before tail 'ley was a IWilliam McKenzie terminal ives Easterwood more space Alan Sembera t c: 'ingress budget j; federal i ,1 an 580 t ()| in the aeon tie because by Congi' 'be kindi -apitol Hi )n SENIOR STAFF WRITER T rav eler s who arrive at Texas n both hot hL&M’s Easterwood Airport will ptiBet a completely different recep- pon this November. I Instead of the little red-brick building that now serves as Eas- lerwood’s terminal, air passen gers will arrive at a sparkling new iwo-level modern structure. I The William A. McKenzie Ter- Ininal, with more than five times Its much space as the old one, will fce able to accommodate up to 1 four airlines and will have space l VS ill f (,r a restaurant. I Gen. Wesley E. Peel, vice chan- Aol fdlor for facilities planning and LCtl construction, said A&M is build ing the new terminal to improve xansportation in the area. “One of the biggest problems n the Bryan-Gollege Station area the poor transportation net- W) -ft work, highways as well as air trav- 'sappfr ;1,” Peel said. I sentenc he case air wouldn't I* al, U.S. Dt hard A. Ct lying Non > 150,000. s resolved ipealstolk of Appeal umbiafi Air transportation capability will help attract large firms to the area, he added, and this will help he area’s economy and research ifforts at A&M. The Texas A&M System will be n charge of running the termi nal, and is responsible for fund ing most of its S14 million cost. The Federal Aviation Associa tion paid $2.5 million of the cost, and local governments paid more than $750,000. The construction project in cludes extending a runway and Construction continues on the William A. Mc Kenzie Terminal at Easterwood Airport. The Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack two-level structure will be able to accommo date up to four airlines and a restaurant. building a parking apron for air craft, an access road and a 225- space parking lot. The airport will be able to han dle any commercial aircraft, Peel said, and the new terminal can ac commodate jetways if the need arises in the future. Peel said the area around the airport will be landscaped and 1,800 trees will be planted. The old terminal will be reno vated for exclusive use by private aircraft. Three airlines now oper ate out of the old terminal. The new terminal will have more than enough capacity to handle the area’s current needs, Peel said, and the building can be expanded to accommodate more than four airlines if necessary. A&M system official will head black college program in Washington By Fiona Soites CITY EDITOR salutes Hungary for strides toward economic,political freedom iesell fine: ed him oi' nd orders* 0 hours i North wit aiding an J BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — President m of Con Bush, proclaiming “the Iron Curtain has begun document to part,” saluted on Wednesday Hungary’s ega) grainpUdes toward economic and political freedom, i the l®H e pledged to open U.S. markets to Hungarian gonds and send the first Peace Corps volunteers ■rer to a communist country, r / His message was greeted with a standing / pCf ovation by the students of Karl Marx University oF Economic Sciences, where “Das Kapital,” the Mndmark treatise of the father of communism, is -t V(Yt no longer required reading. ^ idl F° r Bush, nearing the end of a four-day swing ■trough Poland and Hungary before flying to laris on Thursday for the economic summit, it las another dramatic gesture on his delicate mis- bout ll^lon of encouraging democratic freedoms in the liom U last Bloc without antagonizing the Soviet Union, federal61 “For the First time, the Iron Curtain has begun I. fjto part, and Hungary, your great country, is NewMf leading the way,” Bush said, standing on a uni- iho anthlersity stage against a backdrop of Hungarian i said UVand American flags. test. [I Bush said Hungary will soon be granted most e SoutM favored ■eather ffl Robert K. Goodwin, assistant dep uty chancellor for external affairs for the Texas A&M University Sys tem, will join the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C., July 31 in a top position. Goodwin has been named direc tor of the White House Initiative for Historically Black Colleges and Uni versities. “I’m enthused,” Goodwin said. “There’s a high level of commitment to ensuring the viability of the col leges and universities by President Bush and Secretary of Education Lauro Cavazos. I’m very excited about the prospects of working on their team.” As part of the team, Goodwin will be responsible for monitoring and finding ways to increase funding for research and development, facilities and equipment, student assistance, training, fellowships and program evaluation at the nation’s 104 histori cally black institutions. “Last year $1 billion was provided (to the colleges and universities) in these categories,” he said. “We want to increase that amount and stimu late the private sector.” Goodwin said the Presidential Commission on Historically Black Colleges and Universities, a group formed by President George Bush earlier this year, will look for ways to strengthen these institutions. Bush created the commission when renewing the 1980 executive order by President Jimmy Carter that formed the Initiative. Goodwin, who is a former admin istrator at Prairie View A&M Uni versity, said his past experiences qualify him for the position. “I’ve had intimate involvement in three of the primary institutions that are concerned — the black church. Battalion file photo Robert K. Goodwin black press and historical black colle ge,” he said. “I have a unique back ground from w'hich to help analyze and interpret many of the most sig nificant issues affecting black aware ness in our goal of full integration into structure.” Goodwin was sales manager for the National University Society, pub lisher of the Oklahoma Eagle news paper, he has held various ministe rial positions with both the Presbyterian and the Baptist churches and he served as associate director of the Tulsa Urban League. A native of Tulsa, Goodwin holds an undergraduate degree in socio logy from Oral Roberts University and a master’s dgree from the Grad uate Theological Union in Berkeley, Calif. He is now completing his course work toward a doctoral de gree in educational administration at Texas A&M. nation trading status by the United States, and he announced plans to ask Congress for $25 million in new aid to spur the Hungari ans’ moves toward a free-market economy. Hungarian leaders gave a delighted Bush a snippet of the barbed wire fence they recently re moved from their border with Austria — a bar rier that Bush said had stood as “the ugly symbol of Europe’s division and Hungary’s isolation.” “That is just beautiful,” the president said. “That’s a marvelous symbol of this whole visit.” “There is no mistaking the fact that we are on the threshold of a new era,” Bush said in his speech. “And there is also no mistaking the fact that Hungary is at the threshold of great and his toric changes.” Imre Pozsgay, one of Hungary’s four commu nist leaders, told Bush the changes in his country were “irreversible,” and he said the ruling com munists would “accept the results of free elec tions” scheduled next year arid step down if de feated. Bush’s aid package was similar to the one he presented Monday to Poland, with a twist: the first-ever Peace Corps volunteers dispatched to a communist country. Their aim will be to teach English to Hungari ans. Bush said the English language is already “one of the most popular American exports,” and a key to closing business deals around the world. In this East Bloc state long home to thousands of Soviet troops and arms, Bush also outlined his hopes for deep cuts in conventional arms in Eu rope. “We’re working day and night to get a solid, historic agreement,” Bush said. Secretary of State James A. Baker III said later that NATO will formally present its conventional arms proposal to the Warsaw Pact in Vienna on Thursday, before those talks recess until Septem ber. Bush also held meetings with Hungarian gov ernment leaders and opposition figures. He con ferred with student leaders and gave two a lift to the university in his limousine. After the speech he strolled through a nearby market, shaking hands and plucking a wad of Hungaiian cur rency from his pocket to purchase a dozen ripe peaches. Texas begins sending 2,000 trucks of toxic dirt to Alabama MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — The first of 2,000 truckloads of toxic dirt began its journey today from an abandoned industrial site near Houston to a hazardous waste land fill in west Alabama. The first of 10 plastic-lined trucks, each carrying more than 23 tons of contaminated soil, was re ported on the road for the 600-mile trip to Alabama by 9 a.m. CDT. They were expected in the state about 9 p.m. “The process is very similar to loading dirt anywhere, except that the workers are wearing plastic suits and breathing filters while working around the trucks,” Bill Colbert, a Texas Water Commission spokes man, said. “We also have a wash down facility to decontaminate the trucks before they leave the prop erty.” Gov. Guy Hunt, who along with other state officials went to court last year to try to block the shipments, said Tuesday the trucks will be in spected by state troopers and Ala bama environmental officials. In announcing the inspection plans, Hunt said Alabamians’ rights were violated when they weren’t no tified last year about the planned disposal and allowed to participate in the decision-making process. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approved the toxic waste disposal as part of their Superfund clean-up program. m lines ie tern ,vs coni I JCocaine washes ashore near Port Aransas ise yer- ■ GALVESTON (AP) — A powdery Bubstance law enforcement authori ties are finding along Texas beaches Isn’t sand and costs a lot more. I U.S. Customs agents say bundles If cocaine believed to he part of a Imuggler’s cache have been washing Ishore for more than a week, includ ing 55 pounds of cocaine valued at in estimated $2.5 million. Similar packages have been found Aransas Pass, Port Aransas and on aches in Matagorda County, said .S. Customs Agent Cliff Wolfe. The largest find was discovered Blonday on Crystal Beach by a man Bvho called the Galveston County I Sheriffs Department. The cocaine was wrapped in plas- 1 pc, tied with rope and marked with | he word “centavo,” Wolfe said. “They meant for it to stay dry, nd it was still dry, despite the fact it 'bviously had been in the water for |ome time,” he said, describing bar- lacles growing on the packages. Coast Guard boats are patrolling lesolate stretches of beach regularly, loping to intercept any more pack- ■ges. 2 “If anybody finds any of it, I hope lobody opens the package,” said loast Guard Petty Officer James Gutknecht, at the Port O’Connor station. “This cocaine is pretty po tent stuff.” I Gutknecht said officials aren’t ■ure exactly how many packages have washed up so far from what lome believe is cargo from a drug Inuggler’s ship that went down in Iropical Storm Allison three weeks ago. Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack For sail Reggie Samdval, Michelle Broussard and Deanne Hovorak try to persuade Tim Wright tojoin the TAMU Sailing Club. B-2 bomber meets House resistance WASHINGTON (AP) — Air Force officials taking their case for the stealth bomber to the House were met Wednesday with stiff resistance from budget-conscious lawmakers and a warning that the half-billion-dollar aircraft could become a “museum piece.” “Seven to eight billion dollars a year on one weapons system is twice as much as we’re spending on Star Wars.. I just can’t sell that,” Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, told Air Force officials arguing for the second straight day on Capitol Hill for the B-2 bomber. Air Force Secretary Donald Rice and Chief of Staff Larry Welch said that the radar-evading bomber out paces improvements in Soviet air defenses and that ter mination of the $70 billion program would undermine the nation’s nuclear deterrent force The officials also reminded lawmakers that the gov ernment has already invested about $23 billion in the plane and that stretching out the program over a num ber of years could raise the aircraft’s price considerably. By Aspin’s calculations, a single B-2 bomber could cost about $ 1 billion. “We hope our witnesses today will be able to put the B-2 program into perspective for us,” Aspin said at the start of the hearing. “Otherwise, there remains the very real possibility that the B-2 will become a museum piece.” Members of the House panel reacted to the presenta tion much the same way as did members of the Senate Armed Services panel who listened to the Air Force of ficials on Tuesday. A&M receives honor for system to cut Duncan Dining Hall costs By Mia B. Moody STAFF WRITER Texas A&M has received a Cost Reduction Award for recently im plementing a more efficient pro gram to feed the Corps of Cadets. The program is expected to save the University over $290,000 per year. The dining hall received the award Monday at a national confer ence sponsored by the National As sociation of College and University Business Officers and the United Steel Foundation. Lloyd Smith, director of food services, said the Plate Ready System and the Tray Accumulator System earned the prestigious award for A&M. “The two new systems installed in Duncan Dining Hall during its reno vation are expected to save the Uni versity more than $290,000 per year in labor, food and supply costs,” he said. “Duncan is the only place of its size where 180 people per minute can be served a wide variety of food in a satisfactory way.” The Plate Ready System allows all 2,200 of the cadets to be served and seated in 12 minutes, Smith said. The system that the dining hall uses to collect trays also was praised. “The Tray Accumulator provides 230 tray slots that automatically ad vance each tray into a central dish washing area as another tray is placed into the slot,” he said. “The system can hold 1,894 trays at one time.” Senior cadets Chad Corbett, an engineering technology major from Irving, and Allen Hess, an aerospace engineering major from Ft. Worth, said the new system is more efficient than the old family style service they used to receive. “When it was family style, the food would be placed in the middle of the table and we could get what we wanted,” Corbett said. “If we wanted more we could ask a waiter to bring whatever we wanted. We got our food quicker, but there was a lot more food wasted.” Hess said there would always be trashcans full of food left after the Corps finished eating. “Now people get what they want to eat and there isn’t that much food left to throw away,” Hess said.