ril 16,11 etuse tot ift nets, said the con. have obsen. f t i lets are up *TexasA&MQ _ J.A. _ l* _ __ tie Battalion WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Partly cloudy and cooler. HIGH: 76 LOW: 62 ats to raoveti if tire Nations Gep y voted foraj nth Pacificn' Vol.89 No.133 USPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 17,1990 an using tin rules, to capt i 00,00 year becapp f water i ■ Labor of love by Tim Byre ilights is ityDrivej ;l Oak Mall. Is aphsarebyHet John Haislet, a member of A&M United Method ist Church,volunteers his time to refurbish some of the church’s windows Monday afternoon. He has removed the panes from this window and sand and paint it before replacing the glass. Photo by Fredrick D. Joe Haislet has been a member of the church since 1960 when he came to A&M with the Texas For est Service. He retired two years ago as the As sistant to the Director of the Texas Forest Serv ice. Program trains faculty System offers communication options for professors, students By NADJA SABAWALA Of The Battalion Staff Problems stemming from poor communication between students and faculty soon may be resolved easily, said Dr. E. Dean Gage, acting provost and vice president of aca demic affairs. In a presentation to the Texas A&M Board of Regents Monday af ternoon, Gage said the Classroom Communications Enhancement Pro gram has already received statewide recognition and is “a model program that others will want to talk to us about.” The program will be imple mented for the fall 1990 setnester in hopes of improving the communica tion skills of faculty members. Gage said educational commu nication relies on delivery of the message as well as the curricular content, but most student com plaints have stemmed from the de livery process. “Any student can file a com plaint,” Gage said. “But our action will depend on the number of com plaints.” With the new system, a student has the option to air his views not only to the faculty member with which he is having the problem, but the student can go to the depart ment head or associate dean as well. Gage said these options leave channels open for the student to fol low on his own. If the student is hav ing a problem with a professor, it may go unreported because the stu dent may feel he could not approach the instructor, Gage said. By giving the students other channels, more complaints that may have gone un reported have a better chance of get ting reported. Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr., a distin guished professor in the Depart ment of Petroleum Engineering, said he believed that the fault of lacking communication is not always dependent on one side. “Communication is a two-way street,” Calhoun said. “The trans mitter and receiver must both work. “My belief is that most of the time it’s the receiver that’s not working.” Student Government President Kevin Buchman said the program will have its weaknesses but that it is a good start to addressing the prob lem. “At least the students will know that the administration is sincere in looking at these problems,” Buch man said. Not only is the University con cerned about its faculty, but its tea ching assistants as well. Gage re ported that many assistants feel unready to teach a course. The Committee on Teaching As sistant Training and Evaluation is concerned with the fact that some as sistants have not received proper training to teach college courses, Gage said. They are not aware of the responsibility that stems from taking on the teaching role. “We owe it to them to properly See Campus/Page 6 Committee begins hearings on campus discrimination By CHRIS VAUGHN Of The Battalion Staff The Texas A&M Committee for a Discrimination- Free Campus begins a series of open hearings today to gather information about campus discrimination. Information obtained for a report will be delivered to University President William H. Mobley. The first hearing is scheduled at 4 to 5:30 p.m. today in 502 Rudder A second hearing is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. Thursday and a third hearing is set for 2 p.m. April 25 in the same room. Sheran Riley, chairwoman of the committee, said the open hearings will be used primarily as information gathering tools. “We want to find out what the concerns and the problems are of people on campus,” Riley, an assistant to Mobley, said. “It will just basically be a forum.” Any student, faculty or staff member wishing to tes tify before Riley and the other committee members pre sent, however, will only have three minutes to voice their concerns. The committee, established in June by Mobley, is re viewing current mechanisms to cope with racial, ethnic, religious, age and gender discrimination, and will make recommendations to the president about how they could be improved. Representatives from the Committee for the Aware ness of Mexican-American Culture, Black Awareness Committee, student government, Multicultural Services Department, athletic department, international pro grams, and from various colleges are on the 16-person committee. Riley said the three hearings also will serve to alert people to the current procedures available to deal with discriminatory practices. “We wanted to make ourselves known on campus,” she said. “We want to let people know that we do have mechanisms on campus for people to go to if they do have problems.” The Student Affairs office of Student Services han dles student complaints, while the dean of faculty deals with any problems professors might have. The Human Resources Department handles staff discriminatory problems. “As of right now, I would recommend those places to people,” Riley said. “From what we understand, they are all working okay.” But Riley said any committee recommendations to change the current procedures depends on the prob lems heard during the open hearings. The committee had planned originally to report its findings to Mobley in March, but Riley said it will more likely be May or June now. It was formed last year with student race discrimina tion as its focus, but it gradually broadened to include religidus and ethnic discrimination on a university-wide basis. After studying the problems in its first few meetings in November, Riley said, the committee again increased its focus to include age and gender discrimination. i Wm jnday pril 22 tural0 I Horticulturists domesticate unusual pink, white bluebonnets by TiniM (SUZANNE CALDERON flhe Battalion Staff Don’t let the name of the Texas bluebon net deceive you — it’s not just blue any- nore. The Texas state flower now comes in white and pink. Horticulturists from the Texas Agricul- Itural Extension Service have domesticated [the bluebonnet and developed these two new colors, Dr. Doug Welsh, a TAES horti- jculturist who participated in the project, paid. With the leadership of Jerry Parsons, an jextension vegetable specialist for the TAES in San Antonio, Welsh said, they isolated the naturally occurring, but very rare white and pink bluebonnets. Welsh said the white and pink colors are [very recessive; the odds of whites occuring naturally are one in a million and pink, one in a billion. To increase the odds of these colors oc curring naturally, Welsh said they started looking for white and pink bluebonnets in the wild from which they could harvest seeds. “We put it out in the media (in San Anto nio) ... we put out a call to tell people ‘if you see white bluebonnets, let us know,’ ” Welsh said. He said they told people not to pick the flowers, but to tell them where they were lo cated, so the seeds could be harvested. To give an example of how rare the flow ers are, in 1985, the first year of the project, Welsh said they only had a pound of white seed. “A pound of seed was all we could collect in all of San Antonio,” Welsh said. “You are talking these plants are rare, rare.” Then the white and pink bluebonnet seeds were sown and grown in fields in Wintergarden to increase the seed source, he said. The fields usually would have pink or white flowers, but quite a few blue flow ers also would appear, he said. To keep the white or pink seed pure, he said, the blues immediately were pulled from the fields. He said the first year the seed from the white plants came back 90 percent pure. Because the pink bluebonnet is more re cessive and rare than the white, only 8 per cent of the pink bluebonnets came back true pink the first year. During the second year, however, 98 percent of the plants were true pink. The key to the process is selecting the color variants of the flowers and letting them grow alone, he said. “By having the plants together, they cross-pollinate only recessive genes,” he said. Through the isolation of specific colors, Welsh said, different shades of colors are emerging. In some of the pink flowers, a maroon throat is emerging, showing the possibility of a maroon bluebonnet. The maroon flower will be called the Aggiebonnet, he said. “If there is a maroon throat, that means we can get a maroon flower — so now we are after the maroon,” he said. There is no physical manipulation in volved in getting these various colors, Welsh said. “We are just helping out Mother Natu re,” he said. The idea for isolating different colors of bluebonnets was started by Carroll Abbott, a seed company owner in Kerrville, who loved wildflowers. “He was just in love with wildflowers, bluebonnets specifically,” Welsh said. “His dream was to have a red, white and blue bluebonnet Texas flag for the (Texas) ses- quicentennial (1986).” But before Abbott could make his dream a reality, he lost his life to cancer. After his death, Parsons, a friend of Ab bott’s, tqok up a mission to continue Ab bott’s dream to find a way to come up with red, white and blue bluebonnets. “The germanics are out there — Mother Nature has given us the pink, white and blue,” Welsh said. “A mixture of pink and blue will give you red — the question is can we get it to happen naturally.” The domesticated blue, white and pink bluebonnets are now commercially avail able as annual bedding plants. UT campus activists battle against racism AUSTIN (AP) — The new student body presi dent at the University of Texas said Monday that [campus activists have just started their battle gainst discrimination, after last week’s protest at a fraternity house whose members were accused of racist acts. Days after that peaceful protest, UT-Austin President William Cunningham was interrupted when he tried to deal with the racial incidents through a prepared speech. “We have been taking it to the street,” Toni Luckett, new president of the university’s Stu dent Association said. “I think that we have been bringing it to the administration’s attention in a way that shows they cannot placate us.” “This is definitely a form of protest that we’re going to use, among others, and that’s why I was elected,” said Luckett, who is black. But Larry Dubinski, president of the Interfra ternity Council, said the protesters have been “showboating.” "The w hites are being very alienated this week, think,” he said. “It’s got to stop being a black Columnist addresses issue- Page 2 thing. It’s got to be a university thing, because it’s got to be best for all the university.” For at least the second time in recent months, a crowd of about 1,000 students on Friday dis rupted a statement by Cunningham on recent fa cial incidents at the school. Cunningham also was interrupted by student shouts — including “UT divest” — on Jan. 15, while giving a speech on the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday. Several hundred students marched last Wednesday in a protest organized by the Black Student Alliance to protest two incidents asso ciated with a spring fraternity-sorority cele bration called Round-Up. A Phi Gamma Delta member sold T-shirts with a “Sambo” caricature head depicted on top of basketball star Michael Jordan’s body. And a car was painted with racial slurs and destroyed at the Delta Tan Delta house. After the march, the students gathered at the Phi Gamma Delta, or Fiji, house to protest. The administration temporarily has sus pended the two fraternities, pending an investi gation. Black student leaders have called for a one-year suspension. While students are concerned with the recent incidents, Luckett said, they want to eliminate in stitutional racism at the university. “We think the way to attack the ignorance on our campus is to diversify the curriculum,” she said. Students have called on the administration to adopt a Black Student Alliance program advocat ing diversification of the UT curriculum and more intensive recruitment and retention pro grams for minority students and faculty. Dubinski said the Interfraternity Council sup ports those proposals. Census Bureau ’ s added phone lines assist callers The Census Bureau an nounced that toll-free phone lines for those needing help com pleting their census forms will be available until Sunday. In response to an overwhelm ing number of calls to the Spanish assistance number, the Census Bureau has added lines in its phone banks in San Diego, Austin and Jacksonville, where the bulk of the calls will be handled. Persons who have not yet re ceived a census questionnaire should call the appropriate phone number and report their address so that they will receive a census form or so they can be contacted for non-response fol low-up. All numbers are staffed from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. seven days a week. The numbers are as follows: • English — 1-800-999-1990 • Spanish — 1-800-283-6826 • Cambodian — 1-800-289- 1960 • Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese)— 1-800-365-2101 • Korean— 1-800-444-6205 • Laotion— 1-800-888-3208 • Vietnamese — 1-800-937- 1953 • Thai — 1-800-288-1984 • Assistance for hearing im paired — 1-800-777-0978 There is still time to complete and return census forms, but starting in late April, census-tak ers will visit households that haven’t returned the question naires.