Thunderstorms High 85 Low 64 y / The 16-hour registration limit O / sacrifices students’ rights to / choose their own schedules | -Battalion Editorial Board yfAf/ An oily situation A&M petroleum experts react / to claims that oil is inorganic ( and in limitless supply /&/ ^ Baylor Bears 1 / The next stop in •- S the Aggies’ quest 1 for postseason play % Page 7 Page 2 Page 5 The Battalion Yol.91 No. 133 Coliege Station, Texas “Serving Texas A&M since 1893” 8 Pages Friday, April 17, 1992 Iryan substance abuse clinic will aid research, official says By Alysia Woods The Battalion prison The ■Texas A&M faculty and students will have a multitude of research opportuni ties in studying drug and alcohol abuse at a substance abuse treatment center for |soners to be built in Bryan. e Texas Department of Criminal Jus tice announced last Friday that it will con struct the 1,000-bed drug and alcohol abuse treatment facility in Bryan. ■The center will not only provide jobs for the community, it will also provide opportunities for research and internships within the College of Medicine and the University's Center for Drug Prevention and Education. Dr. Dennis Reardon, director of the Center for Drug Prevention and Educa tion at A&M, said the proposed treatment center's first and foremost function will be to benefit society. "Eighty percent of the violators who are sent to prison have a drug problem," Reardon said. "If they are unable to get help, they may commit the crime again." Reardon said if society could interrupt the cycle, then recidivism could be re duced. Recidivism occurs when someone is convicted of a crime, sent to prison, re leased and then commits another crime. "I believe that throughout the state, these new facilities will go a long way," he said. Alcohol and drug abuse is a disease of the body, mind and spirit, Reardon said. By.eliminating the disease, prisoners can re-enter society, he said. Reardon said Bryan was probably se lected as the facility's site because of Texas A&M. He said the state facility will give the University's Center for Drug Pre vention and Education a number of aca demic and research opportunities. "We're already involved with many things in the community," he said. "This will give us a wonderful opportunity to see close-up how a program of this kind functions." Graduate students in various depart ments may receive internships at the facil- ity. The treatment center will also provide the basic curriculum for A&M students to become licensed chemical dependency counselors. Dr. Richard DeVaul, dean of the Col lege of Medicine and executive director of the Texas A&M Health Science Center, said the facility will be a tremendous re source to the University. "We have an interest in this area from a teaching and research standpoint," De Vaul said. "This is an area with broad re search and we hope to do many studies there." DeVaul said he will soon be working with other A&M administrators to plan research and educational programs at the facility. Services to be offered at the drug and alcohol abuse facility will include assess ment of suicidal and psychotic tendencies, crisis intervention and hospitalization screening. Stress management programs, instruction in parenting and group thera py will be provided to the inmates as well. Building A Future — In Space A&M tests Freedom's escape pod for NASA By Jayme Blaschke The Battalion R2-D2 and C-3PO used one to escape from Darth Vader at. the beginning of Star Wars, and now researchers at Texas A&M University are busy testing one forNASA. At the Offshore Technology Research Center at Texas A&M, NASA is in the final stages of preparation for the testing of the Assured Crew Recovery Vehicle, a type of escape pod for the proposed Freedom space station. When the Freedom space station is completed by NASA in the late 1990s, it will be the United States' first permenant- ly-manned space station. Since a space shuttle will not be able to stay with the station at all times, it is essential a sys tem for the safe return of astro nauts to Earth be included in case of emergencies, said Jim Cioni, assistant director for the escape pod project. The recent stranding of a cosmonaut in orbit aboard the space station Mir for six months because of turmoil in the former Soviet Union further underscores that point. "In the old days, American spacecraft always landed in the water," Cioni said. "When NASA began the shuttle, we got away from that, because the shuttle lands like a plane on a runway. Now, with the ACRV, we're going back, and relearn ing what it's like to land in wa ter." See A&M/Page4 NASA A&M researchers are designing an escape system for the proposed space station Freedom. Program upholds grant criteria, official says By Jayme Blaschke The Battalion For the more than two years Texas A&M has been a space grant university, it has worked to increase its leadership in space- oriented science. Even though there is a space grant university in nearly every state, strict qualifications ensure the designation's prestige, said Sallie Sheppard, director of the space grant program at Texas A&M University. A school, to qualify as a space grant university, must have spent a minimum of $2 million a year for the past three years on space-oriented research, and continue at that level to maintain space grant status. "Space grant is oriented to ed ucational programs," Sheppard said. "There is a strong outreach "Space grant is intended to enhance education with space applications, with education as the focus," — Oran Nicks, head of the Space Research Center at A&M. component which works with public schools, encouraging stu dents to stay interested in math and science, which is essential for the broad definition aerospace career. "The funding for space grant comes from NASA, and is a fed eral grant," she said. "Since it's federal, we're required to put up matching funds, but NASA is es sentially funding the operation." The real impact of the space grant designation is yet to be seen, said Oran Nicks, head of the Space Research Center at A&M. Since the program has only been established for several years, it is too early for any long term effects to manifest them selves, Nicks said. "Space grant is intended to See Space/Page 4 Afghan rebels seize power Communist regime crumbles KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — President Najibullah tried to flee the country early Thursday as rebels advanced toward the capi tal, but he was stopped and then stripped of power, a senior gov ernment official said. There w r ere unconfirmed re ports that he had been arrested and another that he had escaped the country.lt was not immediate ly clear who was running the gov ernment. It appeared some gener als and at least one rebel leader might be in charge, but officials provided conflicting details on the size and composition of the lead ership coalition. The toppling of the Soviet-in- stalled dictator had appeared in creasingly likely in recent days. It also raised fears that Afghanistan could collapse in chaos and a bloodbath unprecedented in the 13-year-old civil war.Pakistan called for an immediate cease-fire by the numerous and often antag onistic Muslim guerrilla groups. The United States and U.N. Secre tary-General Boutros Boutros- Ghali also urged restraint, and said the rebels should work to im plement a U.N. peace plan. "Fighting is violence, fighting is death," said State Department spokeswoman Margaret D. Tutwiler. Some rebel groups declared the U.N. plan dead, and one radical organization vowed to continue fighting the government and ri vals unless a strict Islamic funda mentalist government was in stalled. If Najibullah's fall provokes fighting among the guerrilla fac tions, Iran could find an opening to try to spread its brand of funda mentalism in Afghanistan. A few of the smaller guerrilla groups have ties to Iran, but the largest factions do not. Kabul was calm despite several days of rumors that Najibullah had fled or tried to flee. State-run Kabul Radio did not report the change in power until Thursday night. Foreign Minister Abdul Wakil said Najibullah tried to escape with a brother and a close aide but See Rebels/Page 4 CS utility workers hit, break natural gas line Workers digging a hole for a telephone and power pole acci dentally hit a natural gas line Thursday afternoon, forcing au thorities to close streets and evac uate residents. Crews from College Station Utilities and GTE were digging a hole for a utility pole in the park ing lot of a grocery store in the 800 block of Wellborn Road. At 2:46 p.m. they struck a four- inch natural gas line owned by Lone Star Gas Co. The College Station Fire De partment responded, sending four vehicles to the scene. Firefighters evacuated people from the store and two nearby homes, then su pervised as workers shut off pow er at a nearby apartment complex. Police diverted traffic from the area for an hour and a half, until a repair crew arrived to fix the leak. Although some nearby resi dents suffered ill effects from the gas, a fire department official said no one was hospitalized. ithics committee lists 303 bad-check writers I WASHINGTON (AP) - The iouse ethics committee on Thurs- jday listed 303 current and former Kiwmakers who wrote bad checks at their members' bank, capping a i alitically explosive probe likely produce fallout at the ballot box i November. Rep. Ronald V. Dellums, D- alif., topped the list with 851 yerdrafts on his account. Rep. erry Sikorski, D-Minn., was sec- ad with 697. Third was Rep. auis Stokes, D-Ohio, with 551. Stokes is chairman of the ethics committee but removed himself ■om the panel's bank investiga- ition because of his bad checks. I The list cut across party lines, rid included veteran lawmakers tnd relative newcomers from ev ery egion of the country. I It included five senators and four members of President Bush's Cabinet. Of the 303, 33 had only one overdraft at the now-closed bank that has become a symbol for the perks that members of Congress bestowed on themselves. Dozens more had none and thus were not on the list. It was the second list released by the committee in less than a month in the scandal that has vir tually consumed Congress. The earlier one, naming 22 "abusers" of the now closed bank, sent individual House members scrambling in efforts to minimize damage to themselves and the po litical parties looking for advan tage in the fall elections. Scrambling continued among See Overdrafts/Page 3 Sen. Phil Gramm announced Thursday the appointment of Don Bowman to a post in the U.S Department of Agriculture. Sen. Gramm presents Bryan man with appointment to state office By K. Lee Davis The Battalion Republican Sen. Phil Gramm "came home" Thursday to ad dress workers at the offices of the State Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service in Col lege Station. Gramm was in town to an nounce the appointment of Don nie Bowman to the post of State Executive Director for the ASCS, which is part of the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture. Bowman, a 26-year Bryan res ident, is the current assistant ex ecutive director for the ASCS. Gramm said within the terms of the federal government, the ASCS post was a political ap pointment. But he stressed that Bowman was imminently quali fied for the position. "This post has normally gone to someone as a political appoint ment, but in this case we have a career employee who wants to be executive director," Gramm said. "We have an employee who has worked with ASCS for 40 years, and I figure after 40 years he has about gotten it right, and has earned the right to have the top spot." One of Bowman's first acts to be taken as director is the dis bursement of $144 million in dis aster relief aid to Texas farmers who have lost money and crops to heavy floods that have hit Texas in the last twelve months. The ASCS employs over 1,500 people in 230 offices across the state to aid farmers involved in ASCS programs with an annual administrative budget of $44 mil lion. "I travel to a lot of places around our country and some times around the world," Gramm said. "There is only one place that when I go there, people say, 'Welcome home,' and that is Bryan-College Station. I never forget that I am a farm-state sena tor."