Tri^ x ^f M D ^4-4-^lZ Tne Battalion Vol.89 No.122 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, April 2,1990 WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Partly cloudy and mild. HIGH: 76 LOW: 57 Lithuanians resist increased Soviet pressure VILNIUS, U.S.S.R. (AP) — Dozens of newly arrived Soviet military vehicles lum bered through Lithuania’s capital Sunday, but defiant republic leaders resisted the in creased pressure to renounce their declara tion of independence. The Lithuanian parliament’s Presidium met to consider its next moves, and Deputy Prime Minister Kazimieras Motieka told re porters the government “remains ready to negotiate and discuss any questions with the Soviet Union except that of independence.” The last Western correspondents were ousted from the Baltic republic Sunday night on orders of the Soviet government, leading some Lithuanians to express fears of an impending crackdown by the Soviet military. Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev urged the rebellious republic in an appeal Saturday night to renounce its March 11 declaration of independence and enter into talks with the Kremlin on the basis of the Soviet Constitution. He warned that a refu sal may result in “grave consequences for all of us.” The Lithuanian parliament was sched uled to meet Monday morning to forge a response. Lithuanian President Vytautas Lands- bergis rejected Gorbachev’s appeal, saying the Soviet leader was demanding “impossi ble things.” “It cannot be now demanded that we an nul everything that we bore in our hearts,” he said in remarks carried Sunday by the official Soviet news agency Tass. But Landsbergis said he would send ne gotiators to Moscow on Monday to try to set up a meeting with Soviet officials. Western reporters counted almost 30 ar mored vehicles being unloaded from trains that arrived near the Vilnius airport. Oth ers drove through the city, their treads slic ing into the asphalt, apparently on their way to a nearby base. Soldiers peered out of the lookouts. The reinforcement of the Vilnius garri son came in broad daylight when many resi dents were out for Sunday strolls to savor the spring sunshine. Motieka complained that the Soviet army had refused to inform the Lithuanian gov ernment about its activities. An additional column of some 15 ar mored personnel carriers had moved through Vilnius in the early morning hours, Lithuanian officials said. Eduardas Potashinkas, an activist and Lithuanian TV editor, said many con cerned residents had called the television station and Lithuanian radio to report troop movements overnight. Western journalists saw 30 to 40 armored personnel carriers, or APCs, full support vehicles and soldiers being unloaded from a train near the airport north of Vilnius at about noon Sunday. “There was a big transport that came by train,” a local photographer said on condi tion of anonymity. “There were a lot of APCs, over 20 ol them at least, and also trucks. It looked like they were beginning to unload.” Later Sunday, 28 APCs, eight trucks, two jeeps and a tanker could still be seen at the station, while other vehicles were driving through the city. Gorbachev, in his first formal appeal Since the Lithuanian crisis began, said the republic’s chosen path towards indepen dence was “ruinous and will only lead to a dead end.” In an 18-line statement addressed to the Lithuanian Supreme Soviet, Gorbachev charged Lithuanian leaders with taking steps that “are openly challenging and in sulting to the entire (Soviet) Union.” “I propose that the Lithuanian Supreme Soviet immediately annul the illegal acts it has adopted,” Gorbachev wrote in his ap peal, which was prominently played Sunday on the front pages of major Soviet newspa pers. List names residence halls, classes exposed to measles March to the Brazos The following is a list of residence halls and classes that possibly have been exposed to measles. The A.P. Beutel Health Center will provide free measles-only vaccines to stu dents who live in the affected floors of these residence halls or attend these classes. Residence Halls Possibly Ex- sed To Measles: osher Hall: First and third floors Spence Hall: Third floor Krueger Hall: Third floor P° Classes Possibly Exposed To Mea- 8leS ’ AERS 102-502 BIOL 114-502 BIOL 114-503 BIOL 124-528 CHEM 101-501 CHEM 102-502 CHEM 111-515 CHEM 237-503 CPSC 320-501 CPSC 462-500 ELEN 305-500 ENGL 104-561 ENGL 212-502 HIST 106-509 HIST 105-512 JOUR 102-500 KINE 199-218 KINE 199-400 MATH 161-503 MATH 417-502 London riot blamed on extremist groups LONDON (AP) — Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and opposition politicians on Sunday blamed ex tremist groups for turning a carni- val-like anti-tax protest into one of London’s worst riots this century. The new local tax went into effect Sunday in England and Wales de spite Saturday’s protest by 40,000 people in Trafalgar Square, which went amok when militants smashed windows, torched cars and battled police. Hundreds of people were in jured. The so-called community charge replaces a property tax with a levy on each adult and increases the amount many pay by up to a third. Critics say it’s unfair because Brit ain’s richest man, the Duke of West minster, pays the same rate as his gardener. Thatcher told reporters of her “absolute horror” at Saturday’s vio lence as she left church at her coun try residence at Chequers. “People have a right to demon strate peacefully,” she said. “This was taken over by some extreme groups who used violence with no consideration for others or their property. Let us hope that justice will be seen to be done.” Labor Party chief Neil Kinnock said those who caused the violence must be “treated as criminals” and punished. “As always, they damaged free dom and like every other democrat, I regard them and treat them as ene mies of freedom,” said Kinnock, whose party is 28 points ahead of the Conservatives in opinion polls. Scotland Yard launched a top- level investigation into the six-hour street battle which sent 58 police and 75 civilians to the hospital, injured 22 police horses and caused hun dreds of thousands of dollars of damage. Detective Chief Supt. Roy Ramm, leading the investigation, said 341 people had been arrested for of fenses including arson, robbery, se rious assault, criminal damage and looting. The heart of London looked like a war zone after a battle on Sunday. Clean-up crews cleared rubble and burned-out cars from the streets and strollers wandered past boarded-up restaurants, pubs and shops whose windows had been smashed. Many victims were among Brit ain’s most exclusive names: Liber ty’s, Burberrys, Mappin and Webb, Dickens and Jones. The Independent on Sunday newspaper called it the worst riot in central London this century. Scot land Yard said it was one of the worst but nobody had yet researched whether it was the worst. David Meynell, Scotland Yard’s deputy assistant commissioner, blamed the “sustained and savage vi olence” on about 3,500 people who were among a crowd of 40,000 at a rally in Trafalgar Square. Law students at UH seek equal funding HOUSTON (AP) — University of Houston Law School students, tired of the carpet being plusher at the University of Texas Law School, say they’ll ask the Legislature for more equitable funding. “We’re kind of lost in the back wash of UT,” said Ron Oi lman, 37, a second-year UH law student who helped form a political action com mittee, Student Union. “We’re chro nically underfunded. “I would not stand up and say they should fund the University of Houston at the expense of the Uni versity of Texas,” Ortman said. “It’s not realistic. It’s not practical. What they should do is find some method of funding us up to par with the University of Texas at Austin.” The three-member PAG, orga nized in early March, started a news letter, initiated a letter-writing cam- E and made a video to send to itors and the Texas Higher Ed ucation Coordinating Board. The video shows Ortman stand ing in a hallway under an umbrella, some chalk boards spewing water and leaky roofs allowing water to MATH 417-503 MATH 433-500 PETE 413-500 PETE 415-501 PETE 417-500 PHIL 240-501 POLS 206-502 POLS 206-511 POLS 207-505 PSYC 107-501 PSYC 107-507 SCOM 305-500 SCOM 404-507 SOCI 205-505 SOCI 404-500 SOCI 420-501 VPAT 412-501 VTPP 429-500 Photos by Mike C. Mulvey Members of the Texas A&M Corps of Cadets held their an nual March to the Brazos Satur day to raise money for the March of Dimes. Right: Talon 12 members Jer- mey Nobling (L) and Clay Graves (R) carry their new first sergeant Mike Sutherland through a pool of water. Below: Members of K-1 walk arm-in-arm at the campsite. flow over electric sockets and over head lights. Dean Robert L. Knauss said the UH Law Center facilities need about $1 million in immediate structural repairs and maintenance, including a new roof. “Most of the safety-hazard ones have been taken care of,” Knauss said. “It’s not as if (repairs) haven’t been happening. Repairs have con stantly been going on, but it’s kind of Band-Aid repairs.” University officials say they began deferring maintenance policy with financial cutbacks in the mid-1980s. They say the university needs at least $17 million in repairs. Mark G. Yudof, dean of UT’s law school, said Texas students have not been exempted from cutbacks, but he said both law buildings are in “very good condition.” “UT’s been on a rather low-main tenance budget,” Yudof said. “We’ve had a lot of problems with that.” But, he said, “I think the (UH) students are barking up the wrong school.” Students to help redevelop suburb Architecture students contribute designs to Houston Heights By BILL HETHCOCK Of The Battalion Staff Texas A&M architecture students are putting their skills to work and gaining practical experience in their field by helping redevelop an area of Houston. David Ekroth, a professor in the architecture department, is heading the program in which 11 environ mental design and 16 landscape ar chitecture students are contributing their design ideas to residents of Houston Heights, the oldest suburb in Houston. Ekroth lives in Houston, and said he is glad to have the op portunity to be involved in this pro ject. “The Heights area is architectu rally rich,” Ekroth said, “It is a planned community, so the growth is not haphazard. We’re looking at areas within the Heights that are primed for redevelopment.” Ekroth said both students and have an impact on the community,” he said. “They (the community) can’t afford to pay professionals to do fea sibility studies, so we’re doing this for them.” “X I his is a chance for university architecture students to engage in a real project where their work does have an impact on the community.” —David Ekroth, professor Houston Heights residents benefit from this arrangement. “This is a chance for university ar chitecture students to engage in a real project where their work does The environmental design stu dents helping with the restoration project are in Ekroth’s senior design class. The landscape architecture students involved are in Phil Pregill’s fourth year design class. The stu dents get 6 hours credit for the class. Creighton Bennett, a senior land scape architecture major from Waco, said he enjoys the cross-disci plinary nature of the project. “This is the first time we’ve been able to work with the environmental design students,” Bennett said. “The collaboration is beneficial to us both, because we can learn from each other. We can come up with more effective designs if we have input from different backgrounds.” Tom Troegel, executive director of the Greater Heights Chamber of Commerce, said he is pleased to have the services of the A&M ar chitecture students. Troegel works See Architecture/Page 13