Page 8 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1979 More moon rocks may he missing United Press International WASHINGTON — An internal memorandum charges the National Aeronautics and Space Administra tion is missing a much larger quan tity of moon rocks and soil samples than space officials are willing to admit. The document also charges a space program official told NASA auditors moon materials were being stolen, but the case was not investi gated further. The memo said more than 24 per cent of the samples sent to various research scientists for analysis and study, under a $41 million grant program, were either unaccounted for or missing. Last week auditors found “sub stantial quantities” of the lunar samples brought back by Apollo as tronauts were missing. But NASA officials said the missing soil samples amounted to only 17 ounces. Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., whose subcommittee handles NA SA’s budget, immediately asked for a written response from NASA and for an investigation of the lunar ma terial program by the General Ac counting Office. Meanwhile, a private memoran dum sent last Friday to NASA In spector General Eldon Taylor by Claude Lynch, director of the agen cy’s southwest regional Office of Audit, strongly disagrees with NA SA’s response to the audit’s find ings. Lynch said his office’s audit found 24.87 pounds of moon samples were “in the uncertain category” — either unaccounted for or missing. That represents 24.6 percent of the quantity given to researchers for study and analysis. “I cannot understand how anyone can say an uncertainty factor of 24 percent is not substantial when we are dealing with a unique product,” Lynch told Taylor. Lynch’s memorandum also said one auditor “was informed by a JSC (Johnson Space Center) Security Of fice person that an employee work ing in the Curatorial Facility had reported to the NASA inspector a person was stealing moon material samples and how it was being ac complished.” “Allegedy the inspector replied, T do not believe it.’ Because we did not want to be accused of internal strife, we did not develop this point,” Lynch said. He also said that with the excep tion of a 1 percent per year audit, the remaining moon rocks and soil, samples, totaling 745.31 pounds, that remained “untouched” by the study program have never been fully verified by NASA since being weighed originally after the Apollc flights. COLLEGE STATION WOODSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 693-2484 Monterey Ho Use s covn° nS /V, 4# C . HEINEKEN » CtR «N qO\ frijoles r 4Co Of d* p Ol l o ENCHILADAS OPEN LATE AFTER FOOTBALL GAME r i i MONTEREY DINNER 3.59 MONTHLY SPECIAL REG. 4.05 Drama prop too real; fake bomb fetches cops United Press International OKLAHOMA CITY — The drama class’ props at Northwest High School were realistic enough to require an evacuation of the school. A teacher Thursday reported to the principal’s office that something looking like dynamite wired to gether with a timer had been found on a stage. The 1,800 students were evacuated and the police demolition squad was called, said Glen Bow man, the school’s assistant principal and safety director. What police found was “a Lincoln Log set tied together with wire with a little old timer off a washing machine or something tied to it,” Bowman said. “We finally got the information from the drama class that some props had been used in a drama production and had been inadver tently not placed back in the prop room,” he said. r CREAM ALE 0 qOOd tp A I I Freshmen and Sophomores your LAST CHANCE Available 10/12/79 in Select Locations in College Station & Bryan to SHOT! for the 1980 AGGIELAND Harrington Student Lounge 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. I I SPECIAL MAKEUP Monday - Oct. 15 Tuesday - Oct. 16 Wednesday - Oct. 17 I I I Barcelona APARTMENTS NEWLY REMODELED ! ALL UTILITIES PAID and... individual Heating and Air, Cable T.V., 3 Laundry Rooms, Swimming Pool, Security Guard, Party Room, and Close to Campus. 693-0261 700 Dominik, College Station Tox.!-, \vi'. i .U>uj imt KAHCF L0N.\ ■V.N f■ o 1 t Font National brief Credit card financed sniping spree Unite INCH! United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — Police say the sniper who a jail cell Monday used an American Express credit card to financed 23-hour shooting spree that terrorized downtown last weekend Inspector Bruce Lorin said Wayne Cullinane, 22, purchasedju and ammunition in San Francisco with travelers checks bought an American Express credit card under the alias of Gary Mclntoi Cullinane took one woman hostage and fired intermittentlyfc; the 16th floor of an office building until he was captured late Sate day. House maintains Carter s control cLeod C in tomo irs, as mi iject. It goes t >6. I’ve b It was he s me on :th Bostc Cormack oke Thu WASHINGTON — The House, upholding action by Presii Carter, Thursday rejected a proposal to continue price controls domestic crude oil. After three hours of debate, the House in effect told Carter continue his gradual phaseout of price controls, which end Sept 1980. The House defeated 257-135 an amendment by Reps. Toll Moffett, D-Conn., and Bob Eckhardt, D-Texas, which would ha frozen controls at their present level for a full year. The amendment was offered to a bill authorizing $6.9 billion for Department of Energy and various energy programs. Moffett said that U.S. oil companies have taken advantage of price increases to raise the price of oil already being pumped oo! the ground from $6 to $23 a barrel while production costs rem; constant. However, opponents led by Rep. Timothy Wirth, D-Colo., that the extra money is needed to spur domestic production. “The era of cheap and abundant oil is over,” Wirth said, Unili COLUM irs of a w 10 believ nt has liters” h inning to the dau ed Cob ;regated ohn ar ithers ar White lested V\ in suburb Phony priest cashes in on couple nrs befoi bomb th Schoo NEW ORLEANS — A man posing as a priest entered the 1ior12, is a stu an elderly couple Thursday, blessed them and their dwelling £ Tracey i stole $110, police said. The man, dressed in a blue shirt and dark trousers, inti himself as a priest to Jessie Walls, 65, and his wife Dora, 70. Invited inside, he asked for a glass of water and proceeded “bless” Mrs. Walls and the home, authorities said. strict C( who o regatior wife, ! erent el he Ger Marines ready f( Guantanamo dn United Press International MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. — Support equipment for a Marine amphibious force of 1,800 men Thursday was being loaded aboard Navy ships for a landing exercise next week at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. A Navy spokesman said officers were hoping the convoy would be able to depart today. The departure of the fleet was de layed Wednesday because of strong, shifting winds that slowed the load ing of equipment assigned to the 38th Marine Amphibious Unit, or dered on maneuvers last week by President Carter in response to the continued presence of a Soviet combat brigade in Cuba. About 250 vehicles and several loads of cargo remained to be loaded on the helicopter assault ship USS Nassau and the USS Plymouth Rock, two ships that remained an chored offshore while loads were ferried out by barge. Most of the 1,800 combat-ready Marines boarded the three ships Wednesday, the spokesman said. Iward, 2' aictment and tl pa npted a: charg cr but the drivers of the vehic!ei| left on shore overnight. One ship, the USS S County, left Morehead Cil] Wednesday to pick up adif landing craft at Camp Lejs about 60 miles away. The loading operations coit under cloudy skies and i peratures, hut 25 mile winds that hampered Wedce operations had died down 1 , ri rr time the first cargo barges 1( f tLLl docks at 7 a.m. Thursday, The bulk of the assaulli which will storm the bead Guantanamo Bay Oct. 17 arii continue maneuvers on lln I MAT square mile base for a monll assigned to the Nassau, an® long, 106-foot wide ship desiji handle helicopter operations A Marine spokesman i were on the Nassau andwee brought ashore by helicopter! the landing exercise at Guan'J Bay. About 200 were assig Plymouth Rock and the rest! Spartanburg County. *MEC \ Time’s up on sentence for grandma who sold gr McGann Dlst. Houston, TX. ♦ United Press International SIMI VALLEY, Calif. — “Grandma Marijuana” says she is doing just “splendidly” in jail and has used her time to meditate, thinking up a way to cash in on her notoriety. Lois Faulkner, 68, says she plans to go on a college campus speaking tour and “make a fortune from Grandma Marijuana T-shirts, pants, hats, caps, belts and other paraphernalia. ” Faulkner will be released from the Ventura County Jail Oct. 28, after serving a 53-day jail $ for selling and giving marijc school children. She saidst* tributed the pot because it Mi for the children. The woman disclosed he! plans in a letter to the Sim Enterprise. Writers have been contart- about book and movie rij plans on a lecture tourc campuses, campaigning for tion of marijuana, she said. Faulkner has promised! sell marijuana again. NOW OPEN TEXAS CATTLE CO Bar-B-Que Restaurant 3807 TEXAS AVE. BRYAN 846-3176 We specialize in catering forint occasions.