Vol.89 No.66 USPS 045360 8 Pages Battalion College Station, Texas WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Partly sunny, warmer HIGH: 70 LOW: 50 Tuesday, December 5,1989 Americans remain MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Fighting tensified on Tuesday between rebels and ftyal forces in the Makati financial district, fwhere about 2,000 foreigners, including ore than 200 Americans, are trapped in otels. Efforts to evacuate foreigners held by the ebels appeared to have stalled early Tues- ay. A 60mm mortar round slammed into a quatter settlement near the Makati Medical Center about 6 a.m. (5 p.m. EST Monday), en people were taken to the hospital, in- luding a 6-year-old girl who died. Two bombs exploded in the capital late Monday, wounding two people. It was un- lear if they were related to the coup at- :mpt, which began Friday and has killed at least 71 people and wounded more than 500. The U.S. Embassy recommended Tues day morning that Americans living in Ma kati remain in their homes but avoid upper floors. Troops loyal to the government of Presi dent Corazon Aquino, backed by three ar mored personnel carriers, began moving under cover of fire toward the hotel district where the foreigners are. “Are we going to win?,” a colonel asked his men at the end of a briefing. “Yes, sir!” they shouted back. He told his men not to fire unless they had a rebel in their sights. The Japanese Embassy recommended trapped in Manila hotels that Japanese citizens living in parts of the E osh Makati district not under rebel control ;ave for safer areas of Manila. It estimated that about 500 Japanese remained in Ma kati, including about 300 trapped in the ho tels. The United States provided fresh mili tary supplies to the Aquino government and promised $25,000 in assistance for ci vilian hospitals, Richard Boucher, a State Department spokesman in Washington, said. Before the fighting resumed, rebel spokesman Capt. Albert Yen had issued a statement by telephone to news organiza tions, saying the insurgents would release the foreigners to dispel suspicions they were being held hostage. The statement said the foreigners would be free to leave the hotels at 10 a.m. Tues day (9 p.m. EST Monday) and would be taken to Manila’s airport aboard shuttle buses. There was no word if foreign embas sies had been informed of the offer. U.S. Embassy spokesman Jerry Huchel said 215 Americans were believed trapped in three hotels in Makati. More than 300 Japanese also were believed to be in the Ma kati hotels. “Literally, we’re in the middle,” said Bar bara Julich, a New York businesswoman trapped in the Intercontinental Hotel. “(We’re) now low on food. There are babies in the building, and there is no baby food, and the mothers are hysterical. “We saw a group of nuns trying to walk where the tanks are. They were eventually shot at and took cover.” At least three people were killed in Ma kati on Monday and 15 wounded, including one American, by rebel snipers and in fighting between rebel and loyalist forces. Earlier, spokesmen for the Makati Medi cal Center said 10 people were killed. They said the discrepancy was due to an error in records. Hospital sources identified the wounded American as Jerome Weissburg. They said he was hit in the arm by glass when a bullet shattered the window of his room at the Peninsula Hotel. They did not know his hometown. Stonehenge? A row of monolithic portable toilets stand along Jersey Street at bonfire on Friday night to help keep people from urinating on the bonfire site Monday morning. The stalls were used during nearby lawns. Regents create center to aid adult literacy By Andrea Warrenburg Of The Battalion Staff Recognizing Texas’ alarming lag in adult literacy, the Texas A&M Board of Regents Monday autho rized the establishment of the Texas Center for Adult Literacy and Learning as part of the University’s “Commitment to Education” pro gram. The executive summary propos ing the center said Texas lags behind 46 other states in the rate of adult lit eracy and has one of the highest per centages of adults, ages 18-64, who lack basic skills. “Texas has a present and growing problem with adult literacy, espe cially young adults who are attempt ing to enter the work force or post secondary educational programs,” A&M President William Mobley said. The center, which will be part of the A&M College of Education, will attempt to help solve the state and national education problems from kindergarten through college doc torate levels. The center will address five areas: developing an information network with those organizations which are engaged in adult literacy; determin ing research needs and seeking funds from appropriate sources; dis seminating research findings and re lated information; becoming a re gional resource center for adult literacy information; and developing collaborative research, staff devel opment and evaluation activities with appropriate interested units within the Texas A&M University System. “X I exas has a present and growing problem with adult literacy, especially young adults — William Mobley, A&M President Funding for the center initially will come from project awards from the Division of Adult and Commu nity Education in the Texas Educa tion Agency. The center also will seek additional funding from fed eral agencies, foundations, private corporations and non-profit organi zations. A director of the center to serve as its chief administrator will be ap pointed by Mobley at a later date. Czechs gather en masse, reject new government In support of opposition PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) — More than 150,000 demonstrators chanting “They must go!” rejected the new Communist-dominated gov ernment Monday and demanded free elections in a roaring show of support for the opposition. Also on Monday, thousands of [tourists from Czechoslovakia freely visited the West for the first time in decades after the government lifted imost travel restrictions. Demonstrators massed in central Wenceslas Square for the first time since Nov. 27, when a nationwide general strike forced the govern ment to grant historic concessions. That demonstration capped 1 1 straight days of rallies in Czechoslo vakia. Monday’s demonstrators waved red, white and blue national flags and applauded opposition demands for elections by July and a second general strike on Dec. 11 if there is no new government by Sunday. “Resign! Resign!” they chanted. The turnout at the rally and smaller ones elsewhere was a clear signal to the government that the opposition has massive popular sup port for its demands for real democ racy. They were protesting the new co- dition government named Sunday, which brought only five non-Com- munists into the 21-member Cabinet nd left Communists in control of all :ey ministries. Thirteen were hold- )vers from the previous Communist Cabinet. In an indication the government nay respond to demands for new ninisters. First Deputy Premier Bo- tumil Urban met with two opposi- ion representatives to negotiate a lew meeting with Communist Pre- nier Ladislav Adamec later this veek. Frantisek Pitra, the premier of the zech republican government, sked for more time to consider changes at the republic level, post- xming an announcement originally cheduled for Monday night. The governments of the Czech Slovak republics control key teas such as justice and education n their respective regions. Si ;efo' rts H • p 'EaS je 0& Mai pau re&! srs. ■g tv 3 ve atm Eleven of the 17 ministers under Pitra in the Czech republic have sub mitted their resignations, including the unpopular ministers of educa tion and justice, the state news agency CTK reported. A parliamentary commission re- [ jorted on its investigation into po- ice brutality against student demon strators on Nov. 17. It concluded that police used inappropriate force and seriously injured peaceful dem onstrators. It said some police on duty then may face charges of as sault and abuse of office. According to CTK, the report blamed “high political figures” for the repression, which “was one of the decisive reasons” for subsequent mass protests. CTK listed no names. The hour-long Prague rally, broadcast live on state radio and television, was a triumphant show of national unity in the fight for de mocracy. That unity was symbolized at the end, when protest singer Ka rel Kryl, who has lived in exile in the West for years, and Karel Gott, the nation’s best-known officially sanc tioned pop singer, led the singing of the national anthem. The people loudly cheered Civic Forum spokesman Vaclav Maly when he announced that the opposi tion hoped to field its own candi dates in elections. “Thanks for your help and sup port!” Maly shouted. “That’s it! That’s it!” the crowd chanted back in a roaring show of support for Civic Forum, the na tion’s leading opposition movement, and its counterpart in Slovakia, called Public Against Violence. Adamec has promised “radical changes” with the new government but has given no specific pledge of free elections, which top Commu nists said last week were likely within a year. Igor Pleskot, a spokesman for workers’ strike committees, told the Prague rally official that trade unions had lost the trust of people and said it was time to set up inde pendent ones. At least 50,000 people rallied in the Slovak capital Bratislava to ex press their anger at the government. Hazardous waste appeal rejected MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - The Supreme Court today left intact a ruling that limits the power of states and tlieir citizens to block shipments of hazardous waste from other states. The court, without comment, re jected an appeal by Alabama officials who failed to prevent shipments of hazardous waste from an abandoned Texas chemical refinery to Alabama. Alabama officials said they were denied a fair opportunity to oppose the shipments. The plans for removing the waste to Alabama were approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under the so-called Super fund law of 1980, aimed at helping clean up toxic waste. The EPA included an abandoned Geneva Industries Inc. petrochemi cal plant in Houston among priority sites to be cleaned up. The site is contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and other toxic chemicals. EPA officials in 1986, in cooper ation with Texas officials, approved removal of the waste to another loca tion. Texas officials signed a contract with Chemical Waste Management Inc. (CWM) to have 47,000 tons of the waste shipped to the company’s treatment facility in Erhelle, Ala. Alabama officials, led by Gov. Guy Hunt, said they unlawfully were denied a chance to participate in the process that led to the selection of the Emelle facility. A federal judge temporarily Gage fills provost position Mobley names McDonald head of Japan campus By Todd L. Connelley Of The Battalion Staff Texas A&M Provost/Vice Presi dent for Academic Affairs Donald McDonald has been named exec utive director of A&M’s new campus in Koriyama, Japan. McDonald will be temporarily re placed by Dr. E. Dean Gage, exec utive assistant to President William H. Mobley, until the provost position is filled on a permanent basis. Both positions were approved by the Board of Regents on Monday. According to Dr. Mobley, McDon- Donald McDonald aid has been a key figure in the de velopment and planning of the Ko riyama Campus. He also said that McDonald is uniquely qualified to provide the proper leadership for the Koriyama initiative. McDonald, 59, recently returned from Koriyama, where he headed the Texas delegation in signing cere monies formalizing the campus which has been in the planning and negotiation stages since 1987. McDonald, who has been at A&M since 1973, said he was excited about organizing a campus and its pro grams from the ground floor. City officials in Koriyama have au thorized 2.5 billion yen — approxi mately $18 million — to support construction and operating costs for the new campus. Dr. Mobley emphasized that no general revenue appropriations from the state of Texas will be used for the Koriyama campus. McDonald will remain at A&M but will make frequent trips to Japan to make sure things are running smoothly, Mobley said. The new campus is scheduled to begin instruction in temporary facili ties by May 1990. The permanent lo cation is expected to oe completed sometime in 1992. McDonald’s successor, Dr. E. Dean Gage, will become the highest ranking academic official on cam pus. Gage said that he will rely on his 15 years of administrative assistance to help him succesfully coordinate the missions of the university. He said he will remain committed to A&M’s administrative goal of achiev ing top 10 status among universities in the nation. Gage, class of ‘65, believes that working closely with the administra tion, and especially the students, is crucial to his role as temporary pro vost. Mobley stated that a Search Advi sory Committee will be formed in the next several weeks to assist in an internal and external search to iden tify A&M’s next provost and vice president for academic affairs. blocked the shipment of the waste. But the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overruled the judge in April and permitted the waste to be deposited at the Alabama site. Silver Taps ceremony to honor 3 The solemn sound of buglers playing “Taps” and the sharp ring of gunfire will be heard on campus to night as three Texas A&M students who died during the past month are honored in a Silver Taps ceremony at 10:30 in front of the Academic Building. The deceased stu dents being honored are: • Michael David Hart man, 32, a senior building construction major from Bryan, who died Nov. 25. • Allen C. Ludwig Jr., 22, a senior civil engi neering major from San Antonio who died Nov. 24. • Michelle Yvette Men- diola, 21, a freshman gen eral studies major from Montgom ery, who died Nov. 12. Dating back almost a century, the stately tradition of Silver Taps is practiced on the first Tuesday of each month from September through April, when necessary. The names of the deceased students are posted at the base of the flag pole in front of the Academic Building, and the flag is flown at half-mast the day of the ceremony. Lights will be extinguished and the campus hushed as Aggies pay fi nal tribute to fellow Aggies. The Ross Volunteer Firing Squad begins the ceremony, marching in slow cadence toward the statue of whatsLawrence Sullivan Ross. Shortly after, three volleys are fired in a 21-gun salute and six buglers play a special arrangement of “Taps” three times — to the north, south and west.