O' ban: of San Franciso The Battalion ffCSiPf 102, No. 170 (6 pages) Serving Texas A&M University Since 1893 THE BATT ON-LINE: http://bat-web.tamu.edu Wednesday • July 24, 1996 Officials still have no dues to bomb theory Falmouth, Mas 1 rash, critics qiit: * a child that ary skill and jiici i feat. aviation subcoi: an John Dune; iam Lipinski, I permit childr. ;’s controls — u I i n^!!5!/ il ii EAST MORICHES, N.Y. (AP) — i _ „ .f livers descended from the Navy’s best .nan a. rGcord i i • np j j Lition rolvage ship Tuesday and recovered gore victims from the wreckage of TWA plight 800, but officials acknowledged ehind 36 pointMat nothing found so far in the debris goslavia beat::.d? bodies shows traces of explosives, entina stunniiil Also, Pentagon analysts have found 10 points and : H0 sign on radar tapes or high-altitude rail Blazers ce-Aotographs of a missile or anything else feat might have brought down the jum- appointed Ame: If jet, spokesman Kenneth Bacon said. I President Clinton, traveling in Cali- team, which a: forma, said that based on regular re- to capture goljlprts he’s receiving, none of the evi- gainst Belarus,!®nee establishes a cause. ! at remaining J “Finding various traces of things epechage. feay indicate that something happened nited States’tojfed it ma y not but right now, the peo- is wiped out r: Pie we have looking at this have not ht competition feawn a firm conclusion that’s been re al Rob Harbirstayed to any of us,” Clinton said, ic bronze on k|' Working over target areas mapped seventh when ou t by sonar equipment, scores of en the first U.:ii vers searched in the silt kicked up by their own movements Tuesday. To complicate matters, sharks had been seen in the area. Three more bodies were pulled up Tuesday, and divers believe 60 to 100 more are under the debris, New York Gov. George Pataki said. ‘There’s a very big chunk of plane on the floor and there are bodies caught within that wreckage,” Pataki said. A portable testing device at the scene initially suggested there might be chemical bomb residues on a piece of wing, but that machine is designed for only the roughest initial screening and is known to display false positives, sources told The Associated Press. “Nobody would rely on it alone without the full testing,” said a fed eral official in Washington, speaking on condition of anonymity. No traces of explosives have been confirmed in FBI lab tests of the wing fragment, other wreckage or bodies through Tuesday evening. Ogden: No more money for higher education By Heather R. Rosenfeld The Battalion Texas A&M students are likely to face more difficulty in obtaining required lib eral arts classes because of budgetary restraints, state officials and A&M ad ministrators said recently. In an interview with The Battalion, state Rep. Steve Ogden, vice chairman of the Senate Committee on Higher Educa tion, said social issues may be to blame for higher education’s budget shortages. “We would rather put money in higher education, but there is so much put into prisons and welfare [and] monies allocat ed to cure societal pathologies instead,” Ogden said. “If we didn’t have to put the money into those matters, more could be redirected into higher education.” Dr. Ray Bowen, Texas A&M presi dent, blamed the financial crunch, at least in part, on Texans’ unwillingness to pay higher taxes in the face of a weak economy. “The Texas economy has been bad since the late ’80s,” Bowen said. “As a result, there has been a massive movement against tax increases that could have put money into higher education, and therefore higher educa tion suffers.” Matt Kimbrough, president of the Liberal Arts Student Council and a junior English major, said although he believes money alone is not the solution, he sees the effects of the limited funds. “I have had trouble getting the class es, and sometimes the only way to get OGDEN into a class is if you are a graduating se nior,” Kimbrough said. Ogden said although understanding the frustration of unavailable classes, the state cannot simply spend more money to fix the problem. “Texas, unlike the federal govern ment, must balance its budget,” Ogden said. “The state says how much we can spend, and we have to allocate it as effi ciently as possible.” Ogden offered a suggestion to stu dents who want an increase in Univer sity funding. “There is good news and bad news re garding adequate funding. ... The Uni versity can raise funding substantially, but students will have to pay for it through the General Use Fee,” Ogden said. “If students really wanted to see an ' See Ogden, Page 2 trend were tt: stlers, who too!] •aw to win fomj er Dennis Hal’ mday. bounced baci -ith a 2-0 victo en’s volleybali nds, 12-15,15- water polo m 7 victory over LOOKING TO THE FUTURE Grad student helps shape space-age communications By James Fowler The Battalion Pat James, The Battalion redrag Spasojevic", an electrical engineering graduate student, is helping design features On a satellite communications network. Predrag Spasojevic', an electrical en gineering graduate student at Texas A&M, has been long separated from home — in both space and time. Spaso- jevic' is originally from Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina but came to Texas A&M in 1990 to work with space-based communications. He chose A&M because his bachelor’s thesis at the University of Sarajevo’s School of Engineering involved collabora tive work with a Texas A&M professor. “At that time, especially in Yu goslavia, you did not have the opportuni ty to find out a great deal about many American universities,” Spasojevic' said. “You knew about the top schools, but it helps to know someone there. So it came naturally to go to A&M.” Spasojevic', a doctoral candidate, works with Dr. Costas Georghiades, a professor of electrical engineering, to implement modem design features on a new satellite communications net work for a small company. In 1994, the company was working on spacecraft power concerns with the Texas Engineering Extension Service (TEES) Center for Space Power when questions arose on the communica tions subsystem. The company’s con cerns came to a head two years ago when problems plagued their first ex perimental satellite. Dr. David Boyle, deputy director of the Center for Space Power, worked with the company as the technical liai son between A&M and Final Analysis Inc. (FAI), the developer of the satel lite communications system. He sug gested that Georghiades review FAI’s communications payload. “They (FAI) are amazed at the impressive work that Predrag and Dr. Georghiades are doing correct ing some problems discovered earli er,” Boyle said. Spasojevic’ and Georghiades have become key contributors to the design of communications software to com pensate for the rapid relative speed between the satellites and their earth- bound terminals. See Satellite, Page 2 A&M/B-CS Council helps bridge gap between university, community 3 yAnn Marie Hauser and Melissa Nunnery he Battalion The Texas A&M/Bryan-College Station Council ield their summer meeting last night at the Sam louston Sanders Corps of Cadets Center Museum. The purpose of the Council is to develop communi- ation and cooperation between Bryan-College Sta- ion, Texas A&M University and the Texas A&M Uni- 'ersity System. The Council toured the Corps Center Museum be- ore being updated by Texas A&M University System Chancellor Barry B. Thompson and Texas A&M Pres- dent Ray Bowen. To continue the University and community link, wo faculty members presented their roles as profes- iors to the Council. Dr. Marilyn Kem-Foxworth, an associate professor a the Department of Journalism, said she was invit- to clear up any misconceptions the community sight have about professors. “I am speaking to give a better understanding of Kdiat we as a faculty do,” Kem-Foxworth said. She explained even though professors do not teach Wery day, they are busy with research and plans for he semester. Kern-Foxworth is a known for her book, “Aunt jemima, Uncle Ben and Rastus: Blacks in Advertis- hg, Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow.” “As professors, you need to carve out a niche, be an ■Xpert in something,” Kem-Foxworth said. Dr. Pam Matthews, an associate professor in the department of English and director of the Women’s Studies FYogram, said there is an important connec tion between the community and the University. “I think it’s high time that universities and the communities they are a part of have much more im portant and varied and frequent connections to each other,” Matthews said. “Universities and communities can’t be separate.” Matthews emphasized the importance of teaching humanities in relation to family values and everyday life. “We talk, for example, about family values and var ious other social problems,” Matthews said. “At the same time, we’re saying we don’t really need the hu- Oianities; we need something practical. I think that’s a major contradiction. Those are the very things we talk about, so there is a kind of practical side to what foes on in a literature class.” Dr. Barry B. Thompson, chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, said the fol lowing about the growth of the A&M system at the Council summer meeting: • Regents will have more authority over tuition and fees. • Administrators will create an understandable code for the tuition and fees. For example, an index system re garding who pays for what. • Faculty recruiting will be made a priority since 28 percent of the faculty will be eligible for retirement in six years. Gwendolyn Struve, The Battalion Dr. Pam Matthews and Dr. Kern-Foxworth, A&M professors, spoke at the Texas A&M/Bryan-College Station Council meeting last night. Pat James, The Battalion POTTERY PASSION Susana Bernadi, an exchange student from Barcelona, Spain, works on a pot tery project as part of a University Plus class Tuesday. Atlanta ’96 Women’s U.S. gymnastics team captures Olympic gold ATLANTA (AP) — Make way for the Dream Teens. The U.S. women’s gymnastics squad, with no member over the age of 19, captured its first team Olympic gold medal after a dramatic vault by 18-year-old Kerri Strug. She collapsed in pain with a badly sprained ankle within sec onds of landing. The victory highlighted kids’ day for the Amer icans in Atlanta, with 14-year-old Amanda Beard winning her second silver of the games in the 200-meter breaststroke and a 17-year-old Cali fornian capturing a trap-shooting gold. There was room for some veterans, too: 29- year-old Ruthie Bolton led the women’s hoops team to another win, and Barcelona medalist Angel Martino captured her second bronze of the Atlanta Games. Martino’s medal was one of five won Tuesday by the swim team, including three golds, that raised its Olympic haul to 17. “Oh my God! It’s so awesome!” said Amy van Dyken, 23, a first-time Olympian who won the 100-meter butterfly. “It doesn’t get any better than this.” The ground-breaking gymnastics gold be longed to the young, the work of Strug and her tiny teammates — 19-year-olds Shannon Miller and Dominique Dawes, and 14-year-old pixie Dominique Moceanu. Strug, before a wildly cheering crowd of See Olympics, Page 6 % 1996 OLYMPIC TELEVISION SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY JULY 24 09 a.m. - noon Swimming-Qualifying heats Rowing Cycling-Final 6:30 p.m.-11:00 p.m. Gymnastics-Men's individual all- around final Swimming-Finals -Men’s 200m breaststroke -Women’s 200m individual medley -Men’s 100m butterfly -Women’s 4x100m medley relay Basketball-U.S. men vs. Lithuania Equestrian-Three-day jumping, team 11:41 am-1:11 am. Volleyball-U.S. women's game Cycling Boxing Water poio-U.S. vs. Croatia Wrestling-Middleweight final