I Texas A&M MM W ^ e Battalion WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Cloudy with a high chance of thunderstorms HIGH: 64 LOW: 48 Vol.89 No.84 USPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, January 31,1990 Catch! Photo by Eric H. Roalson )ffl ce | Curtis Graft, a junior environmental design major from Marshall, :e for I catches a frisbee in the Northside Quad Tuesday afternoon. Soil analysis puts fears to rest A&M Riverside Campus samples uncontaminated By TODD L. CONNELLEY Of The Battalion Staff It looks like it was a false alarm. Jones and Neuse, an Austin environmental en gineering firm, completed its analysis of the soil thought to be contaminated with hazardous waste at Texas A&M’s Riverside Campus. The final report states that “the soils conform to Texas Water Commission requirements for clean-up and should not pose a threat to underly ing groundwater.” The testing was done Dec. 11, 1989, and Jan. 8, 1990, at the Riverside Campus, which is on Highway 21. Seven soil samples were collected by a JN geol ogist at a site where drums that were thought to be contaminated with PCB, a highly carcinogenic compound, were located. With the exception of one sample, all samples were found to contain less than 1.0 ppm (parts per million) of PCB. Sample B-2, at a depth of six feet, contained 1.0 ppm of PCB. Testing was also done on a drum containing paint thinner. Based on the fact that the material in the drum was paint thinner and solvents, the samples of the sludge from the drum were ana lyzed for volatile organics, total metals (arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, se lenium and silver) and toxicity metals. All samples analyzed were below the method detection limit. The question that remains is how to get rid of all the unwanted waste. Even though the PCB contaminated soil con tains a miniscule amount, it still must be disposed of at a Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) reg ulated facility. Presently there are no landfills in Texas authorized to accept waste containing PCB. The nearest location is the US Ecology fa cility in Beaty, Nev. Since the soil in the drums containing paint thinner is classified as a Class I nonhazardous waste by the TWC, A&M has the option to dis pose of the waste at a municipal nonhazardous landfill or an industrial landfill. If A&M chooses a municipal nonhazardous landfill, they must receive joint concurrence from the Texas Department of Health. Panel: Educational system needs support from government By BILL HETHCOCK Of The Battalion Staff Industry, government and education must start working together to improve the nation’s schools, a four-member panel on educational reform said Tues day in a seminar sponsored by the Texas A&M Society for Human Resource Management. Dr. Dean Corrigan, former dean of the Texas A&M College of Education and chairman of President Wil liam H. Mobley’s “Commitment to Education” task force, said the future of industry depends on a quality education system. “Industry has a personal interest and an economic in vestment in the secondary schools in the nation,” Corri gan said. “Universities also have an obvious interest. We’re all in this together.” Dr. John Hoyle, professor of educational administra tion at A&M, said he agreed with Corrigan. “We need to pull the same wagon,” Hoyle said. “In dustry, government and education need to pull to gether. Business leaders need to be concerned about public schools. ,. T . l( r , . “If we want to be leaders in business and industry, we must support education and start making some changes now.” Corrigan said he feels Texas schools are too struc tured. Too much structure leads to a lack of responsibi lity and creativity in educators and students, he said. “They’re 18 years old and have to carry a pass to be in the hall,” he said. Legislation should set standards for secondary schools but should not mandate how these standards are met, Corrigan said. “Set high standards,” he said. “Require accountabil ity, but let them be creative. Let the schools try new things and then see what works. “Don’t put schools in a straight-jacket with all kinds of regulations. The emphasis of the (Commitment to Education) task force is to highlight what works.” Corrigan said he sees some administrative waste in public schools in Texas, but still sees a need for more money to be put into the Texas education system. “Look at teachers’ salaries,” Corrigan said. “In this society, you get what you pay for, and there’s no doubt about it, teachers’ salaries are too low. “Until we do something about that, we are not going to get good teachers. We’ve got to attract and keep good teachers.” Corrigan said he did not see much financial help for education coming from the federal level in President Bush’s latest budget proposal. “If you want to know what an institution, a university or a government stands for, look at its budget,” Corri gan said. “Not much is being added at the federal level to any education programs. If we’re going to improve our schools we’re going to have to do it ourselves. “If we ever needed a kinder, gentler nation it is right now,” he said. Hoyle said more money should be spent on educa tion. “I’d like to see someone throw money at the school system, just once,” he said. Math and science skills are the weak areas in Texas schools, Hoyle said. Only 6 percent of high school grad uates are prepared for college level math courses and only 7 percent are ready to handle college science courses after graduating, he said. Corrigan said emphasis should be put on “higher or See Panel/Page 4 Pipe bomb explodes at church HOUSTON (AP) — A pipe bomb mailed to a church exploded this morning, injuring the pastor’s daughter, the church said. People near the Lakewood Church told police they heard a loud pop followed by screaming. Lisa Osteen, the 30-year-old daughter of the Rev. John Osteen, pastor of the 10,000-member Baptist church, was taken to Ben Taub Hos pital, where she was in stable condi tion suffering from burns, authori ties said. KHOU-TV reported that the bomb contained six- to eight-inch nails and blew up in Osteen’s lap. There was no immediate com ment from police. In December, nail-studded mail bombs killed a white federal judge near Birmingham, Ala., and a black civil rights lawyer in Savannah, Ga., in attacks investigators said were mo tivated by race. The Houston church is predominantly white. “We apparently did have a pipe bomb that came in a small package just in our regular mail that was picked up at the local post office to day,” an unidentified church spokes man told reporters this morning. “As normal procedure, Lisa Os teen opened the package, there was an explosion, and she did seem to have some injuries, but not anything critical.” Houston Police Officer R.L. Bi- shoff said witnesses were being in terviewed by officials inside the church. Osteen was in a church office housed in an auxilary building across the street from the main church when the bomb went off. Reagan told to surrender diary entries WASHINGTON (AP) — A fed eral judge Tuesday ordered former President Reagan to provide ex cerpts of his personal diaries to John M. Poindexter for the former na tional security adviser’s upcoming Iran-Contra trial. U.S. District Court Judge Harold Greene said a 1985 entry includes a “somewhat ambiguous comment” in dicating that Reagan knew of Poin dexter’s work for the Nicaraguan Contras. Greene said Reagan must surren der the material by Monday, a move that could trigger a claim of exec utive privilege by the former presi dent and might delay the Feb. 20 starting date of the Poindexter trial. Reagan submitted more than 100 diary entries to the judge last Thurs day. Greene said entries covering more than 29 different dates in 1985 and 1986 contain “information of significance.” Theodore Olson, one of Reagan’s lawyers, declined to comment. If Reagan balks at turning over the material, Greene said he would provide the former president and the Justice Department with a secret document Poindexter submitted to the court outlining why he needs the diaries. After court filings by all sides, in cluding Iran-Contra prosecutors, the court will “make a final decision with respect to enforcement of the subpoena” for the diaries, Greene said. Correction The Battalion incorrectly re ported that Silver Taps would be held Tuesday night. Silver Taps will be next Tuesday, which is the first Tuesday in February. The Battalion apologizes for any inconvenience this error might have caused. ■“Aggie Watch encourages campus crime prevention Speaker urges caution, exposes myths of date rape By PAM MOOMAN Of The Battalion Staff More than half of the rapes in this country are committed by someone the victim knows, Lisa Kretzschmar, a Rape Crisis Center representa tive, said Tuesday at a date rape program spon sored by Texas A&M’s Department of Student Affairs. Lisa Kretzschmar said rape is a crime of vio lence that uses sex as a weapon, but date rape has an added tragic twist. Date rape can cause even deeper scars than random rape due to the victim’s sense of be trayal, Kretszchmar said. Victims often can’t identify danger signs until the situation is past the danger stage, because they trust their at tacker, she said. “They feel betrayed by their own judgment,” Kretzschmar said. Another painful aspect of date rape the victim may have to face is seeing her attacker again, per haps on a daily basis, she said. There are five myths about date rape, Kretzschmar said. First, some believe it’s not so bad if the victim knows her attacker. Also, if the victim didn’t report the crime, then it’s assumed the rape never happened, or that it wasn’t that bad. “It’s her word against his,” Kretzschmar said. “That’s why date rape is not reported.” A third myth says if a victim didn’t resist, theh it wasn’t rape. Actually, there are several reasons why a woman might not resist her attacker, Kretzschmar said. She could be taken by sur- rise, she could fear for her life, or she might now the attacker and not want to hurt him by resisting. * Another myth is that when a woman says “no” she really means “yes.” Finally, some people may believe the woman owes her date something after he has paid for dinner and a movie. “There is no excuse for forced sex,” Kretzsch mar said. “It’s an expression of anger, power, dominance and control.” Date rape has three stages, she said. First, the attacker “tests the water” by intimate talk or im proper looks. Next, the victim becomes desensi tized when she accepts the attackers advances, even though he’s used no physical force yet. Fi nally, the victim finds herself isolated with her at tacker. Women who may otherwise act aggressively with a stranger are passive when they know their attacker, Kretzschmar said. Women should find out as much information as possible about their date, and if they don’t See Date rape/Page 4 |;By NADJA SABAWALA Hot The Battalion Staff ; I Thieves watch out. . | The University Police Depart ment and student organizations are working together to make crime on campus a thing of the past. t; Aggie Watch is a security program developed to educate students, fac ulty and staff on eliminating the op portunity for crime to occur. Lt. Bert Kretzschmar and Officer Betty LeMay head the University Po lice Department’s Crime Prevention Unit that developed Aggie Watch. The goal of the CPU is to alert the campus community that they are not ts safe as they think, LeMay said. ' “Aggies do not lie, cheat or steal, mt the part we want to concentrate m is ‘nor do they tolerate those who do,’ ” Le ay said. The 1990 opening for the pro gram is Aggie Watch Week, which J ns this week and Monday. Aggie atch Week is sponsored by the De- irtment of Student Affairs, UPD, pha Phi Omega service fraternity, udent Government, Residence all Association and Off Campus jgies. Resource tables with information i how to prevent crime are located the Memorial Student Center < through Thursday. “Engrave and Save,” sponsored by APO, allows students to engrave their valuables with an identification number. Aggie Watch workers will visit residence halls from 7-9 p.m. to help students engrave their belong ings. Bicycle registration will be held by Rudder Fountain and in front of the Commons from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 4-7 p.m. Students can fill out a registration c^rd and receive a sticker with an identifying control number enabling police officers throughout the nation to identify stolen bikes. Both Kretzschmar and LeMay stress the importance of engraving and registering valuable property. “We might break up a burglary ring and recover a lot of property, but we can’t get that property back to the owner if we don’t have a num ber on it, or if it’s not registered in a computer,” LeMay said. Kretzschmar said thieves may have the desire and ability to commit a crime, but the victims provide the opportunity. “Our job is not to bring out the negativity, but kind of go beyond that — how we can prevent the crime from happening in the first place,” Kretzschmar said. Aggie Watch was developed to in form people on campus that there is always a risk of crime, even at A&M. “People tend to be lulled into a false sense of security here and they don’t think of personal safety,” Le May said. Two programs evolved within Ag gie Watch, one for students and an other for faculty and staff. Both in clude presentations about theft protection and personal safety. The CPU hopes these programs will eliminate many crimes as well as break up possible theft rings operat ing on campus. “What we really hope to see, is neighborhood watch signs at the ma jor entrances to campus,” LeMay said. “We want the criminal element to know that we’re watching out for each other and our property.” Aggie Watch has many plans for the future including a Custodial Watch Program beginning in Feb ruary and an Office Watch Program. Both encourage workers to report any crimes of which they are aware.