10 rile Battalion m WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Partly cloudy and warm. HIGH: 81 LOW: 62 bl.89 No.135 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, April 19,1990 y mg can P The R e , hy, who ere. movement ler King | r nraged ers by wr| ; . i infideliii l; td eradlej ndied head wnbyabul. Pro-Iranian group promises hostage BEIRUT, Lebano'n (AP) — A pro-Ira- lian group holding three U.S. educators lostage promised on Wednesday to free me of the Americans within 48 hours as a mmanitarian gesture and said he would arry a message for President Bush. Reliable diplomatic sources in Damascus, Syria, confirmed an American would be freed Friday in the Syrian capital. The group, Islamic Jihad for the Liber ation of Palestine, did not say which of the three would be freed. Its statement was ac companied by an instant photograph of Jesse Turner of Boise, Idaho — the first photo of him alone since three months after his 1987 abduction. However, the White House rejected one demand of the hostage-takers: that a senior U.S. diplomat fly to Damascus to coordi nate the release. The Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine holds Turner, Alann Steen and Robert Polhill. All were abducted from the campus of Beirut University College on Jan. 24, 1987. They are among 18 Western ers, including eight Americans, held by pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon. The longest-held is Terry Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent for the Associated Press, kidnapped March 16, 1985. The kidnappers demanded that John Kelly, U.S. assistant secretary of state for near eastern affairs, fly to Damascus. “The arrangements for the release should be accomplished by the arrival of John Kelly in Damascus to coordinate some final steps to guarantee success within 48 hours,” the handwrittein statement said. It did not specify what the kidnappers expected Kelly to do in Damascus. Kelly served as U.S. ambassador to Lebanon from 1983 to 1988, when the eight Ameri cans were seized. Kelly was in Bonn, West Germany, on Wednesday. Diplomatic sources in Damascus said Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa last month carried a letter on the issue from Syrian President Hafez Assad to President Ha- shemi Rafsanjani in Iran. The letter stressed the necessity to close the hostages’ file, according to one of the sources, speaking on condition of anonym- Uy. He said the Syrians were following a pledge made by Sharaa in February to hos tage families to seek the release of all the captives in Lebanon. In Washington, a State Department spokesman, David Denny, said: “We have release long called for unconditional release of the hostages in Lebanon. We see this as an im portant humanitarian issue. I cannot pre dict any releases for you at this time; noth ing would be served by speculation. “We would, of course, welcome the re lease of any hostage, as we continue to urge the release of all of them.” The kidnappers said the decision to re lease a hostage came in response to behests from Iran and Syria. Iranian newspapers associated with Rafsanjani have urged the hostages be released on humanitarian grounds. ’t StOpDi -pared for a Tong Hoi- woman Tj. a blftoj ' they never id. ‘o to an op. e was pro. . 12:10p.iri. ore doctors ry life sup r Eenttttii 'dicine spe- : nt for the s saying the could not Abernathy's en in tfo nonth for deficiency, tes in 1983 his last r criticism >r passages ‘phy, “-Wi Tumb Ring omen it with one c his 19® h Lowery, rnathy as ern Cfe until, de- fuesdayas te cause of id support i Counts n Luther bernathv's toourna- Students protest logging of rainforests Action group demonstrates at Mitsubishi By SUZANNE CALDERON Of The Battalion Staff 1 ies esponded research rch from r strongly mal activ- icrcent of nHIV has sand le Motorists honked, shouted and gave the peace sign to members of the Texas A8cM Rainforest Action Group as they demonstrated Wednesday afternoon in front of University Mitsubishi, 1912 Texas Ave. Mike Worsham, founder and spokesman for RAG, said the group is protesting the logging of rainfo rests in Sarawak, Malaysia, by the Mitsubishi International Corn. While sounds of a tropical rainfo rest played on a portable radio, the 14 protestors shouted “Save the rainforest” to passing motorists and carried signs reading ‘Mitsubishi Rills Rainforests,’ ‘Mitsubishi Stop Logging Malaysia’ and ‘The Roots Of Our Life System Are Planted In Rainforests.’ The purpose of the protest was to raise awareness about the logging operations, Worsham said. “We want to make everyone who is concerned about the earth — rain forests in particular — about the in terconnectedness of companies, the economy, as well as people,” he said. “If people want to help out they can write Mitsubishi and boycott their products.” Worsham said RAG is not en dorsing a boycott of Mitsubishi products. He said that is a decision consumers have to make for them selves. Mitsubishi has a subsidiary log ging company called Daiya Malaysia which has been logging the rainfo rests in Sarawak for the last 15 years, Worsham said. He said about 80 percent of the- original rainforests in Malaysia are gone, primarily due to logging oper ations. According to literature from the Rainforest Action Network, the na tional organization that RAG at A&M belongs to, the Mitsubishi Corp. also owns 25 percent of Agu- san Wood Industries in the Philli- pines and 49.5 percent of a company in Brazil, both which manufacture plywood. Worsham said A&M’s RAG joined Jason Busch, A&M senior political science major, and 13 others picket University Mitsubishi Photo by Scott D. Weaver Wednesday afternoon to protest the destruction of rainforests by Mitsubishi International Corp. groups in Colorado, Washington and San Francisco, as well as RAG groups worldwide on Wednesday to protest Mitsubishi’s logging opera tions. But Mitsubishi is not the only Jap anese company involved in logging operations, Worsham said. “There are quite a number of Jap anese companies that are involved in logging in rainforests,” he said. “Mit subishi is one of them, it’s not even the one doing the most logging, but it’s the one people are most familiar with.” Ron Yokem, general manager of University Mitsubishi, said he is not familiar with Mitsubishi’s operations in Malaysia. “I am not familiar with what’s going on in Malaysia and as a result, I would not want to make a com ment on it,” Yokem said. The A&M RAG has about 20 ac tive members and has been in exis tence for a year. Worsham said that in the past RAG has had benefit concerts to bring attention to other rainforests being destroyed. Permits proposed to aid bike registration By JULIE MYERS Of The Battalion Staff Bicycle permits, which were made mandatory in a revision during an April 10 Faculty Senate meeting, will be free if they are implemented — and will not be mandatory. Tom Williams, director of Park ing, Transit and Traffic Services, said “mandatory” should never have been used to describe the bike per mits because their is no way to en force such a provision. The price for the permits also was not announced during the April 10 meeting, because the permits will not cost anything, he said. Faculty Senate resolutions are for mal recommendations for action. A&M President William Mobley or the Board of Regents determine reg ulations. Williams said the voluntary per mits are a way to increase bicycle registration and connect bicycles with their owners. “At the end of every year, hun dreds of unclaimed bicycles are hauled off and later auctioned at campus lost-and-found auctions,” Williams said. If more bicycles were registered with parking and transit, the owners could be located easily and reunited with their bicycles instead of auc tioning off the property, Williams said. Additionally, registration of bicy cles is a good idea, Williams said, be cause some homeowners’ insurance policies will not cover the theft of bi cycles that were not registered. He said Student Services, the Uni versity Police Depatment and park ing and transit want to know how many bikes are on campus so those departments can begin to develop a bicycle and pedestrian system. In the future if bicycle riders want services like bike trails or more bike racks, Williams said they might have to pay a fee for those services which only they use. “If they want such a system, then we will truly go in and enforce regu lations,” Williams said. “Students with parking permits for cars shouldn’t have to pay for what they don’t use.” Williams said there is no way to guarantee that everyone registers their bikes because bike registration is voluntary. But he said he hopes students will cooperate because there are no drawbacks to registra tion. It can only benefit the students, Williams said. Supervisor: A&M lags behind in census return By DEAN SUELTENFUSS Of The Battalion Staff Mary Basmann is not happy. Many Texas A&M students, it seems, have not turned in their 1990 census forms, which were due last week. And time is running out for the Census Bureau’s special places operations supervisor. “This operation has to close out entirely within this coming week,” Basmann said. “My job ends. So we don’t have a lot of leisure time to de vote. And we feel that for a group like this we should have gotten a bet ter response, and we should have gotten it more promptly. This does come only once every 10 years.” Basmann, who is in charge of tak ing the census to schools, nursing homes and prisons in a 16-county area that includes Brazos County, said A&M students are lagging be hind other Texas students in return ing their census forms. She said about 64 percent of A&M students have returned their census forms, while up to 98 percent of the students at some Texas colleges have done so. “It’s probably because they con sider it more important,” Basmann said. “And maybe they just have a little different idea about the reasons why one should do it. I don’t really know why others are better. I’m very See Census/Page 7 East European diplomats arrive for lecture series 'as "abo® ;ent sawii e experts ences en- AIDS re- Leaders focus on change By CHRIS VAUGHN Of The Battalion Staff Two officials from East Germany and Hungary visiting Texas A&M believe hard times lie ahead of their two countries as they seek to democ ratize nations that were under com munist systems for almost 50 years. Ambassador Andre Wieland of the German Democratic Republic and Ambassador Andre Erdos of Hungary spoke candidly in an inter view Wednesday night about Ger man reunification, economic prob lems, and the improvement of East- West relations taking place in their countries. Wieland and Erdos are two of five guest speakers participating in the A&M MSC Wiley Lecture Series, “The Changing Faces of Commu nism,” which is Friday night. The lecture will be moderated by ABC journalist Sam Donaldson. The director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency under former President Reagan, Kenneth Adelman; deputy chief of the Propa ganda Subdepartment of the Com munist Party Central Committee, Nikolay Shishlin; and Solidarity eco- nomic advisor, Witold Trzeciakowski also are scheduled to lecture Friday. Wieland, who currently serves as head of the East German delegation to the Open Skies Conference in Ot tawa, Canada, has been at the fore front of events affecting superpower relations and German reunification. Erdos is head of the Department of International Multilateral Rela tions in the Hungarian Foreign Min istry. Both men believe many economic roblems face their countries, which ave been Warsaw Pact nations since the end of World War II. “A lot of problems have to be solved in the next five years,” Wie land said. “Of course, they will be hard times. But we hope that the liv ing standard will increase; hope fully, dramatically.” Erdos said, “No matter what gov ernment comes to power in Hun gary, it inevitably will have to take very unpopular measures. Possibly the next two to three years will be difficult for the population.” Unemployment rates will be among East Germany and Hunga ry’s most pressing problems when state companies, which Wieland See Diplomats/Page 7 Photos by Fredrick D. Joe Committee greets guests By JILL BUTLER Of The Battalion Staff Six members of Texas A&M’s MSC Wiley Lecture Series Commit tee rolled out the maroon carpet Wednesday for three diplomats from Eastern Bloc countries at Eas- terwood Airport. Polish Minister Witold Trzeciakowski, East German Ambas sador Andre Wieland and Hungar ian Ambassador Andre Erdos ar rived in College Station from Dallas to take part in the program. The lecture series, “The Chang ing Faces of Communism,” features a discussion involving four foreign diplomats and Kenneth Adelman, of the United States. Twelve members of the Ross Vol unteers helped welcome the three diplomats by forming a saber arch for the diplomats to walk under upon exiting the plane onto a 12- foot strip of maroon carpet. The three diplomats left the air port after meeting members of the lecture series committee and toured Andre Wieland (left) of East Germany and Andre Erdos of Hungary discuss hardships ahead. See Welcome/Page 7