The Battalion Vol. 73 No. 113 10 Pages Monday, March 3, 1980 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 andidates work for Massachusetts vote United Press International BOSTON — Sen. Edward Kennedy re- imed to his home state to put the finishing mches today on a campaign he hopes will eld his first victory over President Carter hilt the Republican dogfight continued i a two-state battleground. Kennedy, away from Massachusetts for nf days after his New Hampshire loss to arter, scheduled a campaign day of 14 ops in 12 hours. George Bush and Ronald Reagan, pic- ired as “virtually dead even” in the Mas sachusetts GOP contest by the final Boston Globe poll before Tuesday’s balloting, chose to spend most of the last full day of campaigning in Vermont after working the Boston area Sunday. Sen. Howard Baker also campaigned in Vermont, which holds a non-binding “beauty contest” primary Tuesday, with only Rep. John Anderson giving his full attention to Massachusetts. The Globe poll, published Sunday, showed Kennedy with a 52 percent to 37 percent lead over Carter as of Feb. 28. The Massachusetts senator’s overall rat ing among Massachusetts voters slipped only two points in the month since the last sampling, but the pollsters said there had been some signs of more erosion in the final days of their survey. The poll gave California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 4 percent. Seven percent were undecided. The Republicans were too close to call in the final poll. The overall sample gave Bush 36 percent, Reagan 33 percent, Anderson 17 percent, Baker 6 percent, Rep. Philip Crane 2 percent, John Connally 1 percent and Sen. Bob Dole less than 1 percent. Five percent of the voters were undecided. Bush had held a 57 percent to 18 percent lead over Reagan in the poll a month ago before Reagan’s decisive win in New Hampshire. The built-in margin of error of the Re publican sample is plus or minus 4 points. Bush put in the hardest campaign day Sunday, skittering in the cold weather from a synagogue in Brookline to Cape Cod to suburban Boston in his pursuit of the state’s 42 GOP delegates and a campaignreviving win. He had little to say about his decline in the Massachusetts poll, but he, eagerly seized on former President Gerald Ford’s published statement that Reagan could never win a national election. “We need somebody who can win in November,” the former U.N. ambassador said. “We need somebody who can beat Jimmy Carter. Reagan, arriving from the South, also greeted Ford’s new candidate-like com ments calmly, saying, “Well, we’d all like to see him pack his long Johns and come out here on the campaign trail with the rest of He sharply objected to Ford’s suggestion that Reagan could not beat the Democratic candidate, noting he had been elected gov ernor in California, a state with a 2-to-l Democratic registration, and in primaries in southern states with Democratic majori ties. ^Jlay ton’s wlitical 3 future dead United Press International jdj. &om1A AUSTIN — In the corridors of the Capi- -Zhi.S'fJC friends and supporters of House beaker Bill Clayton feel they have a grasp p !980 rea lity of the situation. No matter whether he’s innocent or guil- accepting money in an FBI bribery ivestigation, Clayton’s hope of someday Bing higher political office is virtually t UT • AjuI if he takes the 5th Amendment be- eims, ire a grand jury this month, he might as ell retire right now. ' ‘If they do not indict him, I think it’s ossible he could be speaker one more me, but I think he’s dead for anything else M^Bdless and he may well be dead for s semifinal ro jeaker," said one House member, long a p game willcoi lose friend of Clayton’s but not eager to be nth the winn noted by name. automatic inviuBf he’s indicted or takes the Fifth, that’s jumey. . It’s over. If he goes in there and pleads / SMU endedthfe Fifth Amendment, he can forget about en as coach of ' Bything else politically from this day for- had resigned! 'aril, and I think he probably knows that. Blayton has been linked to the investiga- ch endeditsse .ononly by news reports and his own com- rd, was led h pats, hut he is scheduled to appear before ird Dave PiehlerBind jury in Houston this month to ex- i will take a 16-. lain allegations he consented to help e with Texas Prudential Insurance Co. land a state con- lich it split its fact in exchange for $5,000 cash and the cgular season, ropiise of up to $600,000 in future cam- $ Bn contributions. ' J The speaker’s attorneys have advised ~ H to avoid discussing the case with repor- .jjl-=r ^-ers and have suggested he invoke his Fifth I Bndment right to decline to answer r Bstions from the grand jury, which appa- Bly will have access to tapes of Clayton’s oilversations with the undercover FBI Bit who suggested the payoff. |ack Gullahorn, Clayton’s former top Binistrative assistant and now one of the Brneys helping defend the speaker, says glyton is being advised by some to forget ■ut trying to salvage his political career ^ ■ to concentrate instead on defending Bself against possible criminal charges. _ B I Hn the speaker’s mind it’s hard to di- MJM ||ce his personal life and his political life. Bn By’ve been intertwined for the last 20 KM I Bs,” Gullahorn said. “There are a lot of (BB B> telling him he needs to do what’s good Rhim personally, and that’s what his ■ | p Brneys have been telling him all along.” I W Bhe attorneys have had a difficult time v. kJ *-/ (e|ping Clayton from discussing the case did not manage to clamp a firm lid on l| speaker until he had told reporters ab- iut an offer of $600,000 in campaign contri- DD FOOD, fbutions by the FBI agent. MClayton still feels he can go before the Und jury and tell his story, and surely if College Were are 23 honest people there that they —won t have any reason not to believe him,” Blahorn said. “That’s all he wants to do is til his story. The big problem is that he Jits to tell it to everybody.” gllayton’s predicament has caused the nant race for speaker of the 1981 ses- C to blossom, and half a dozen House Ifinbers now are campaigning, many of jpn on the assumption Clayton will not be M ’“ ,a " Uary ' pne question we the pugs Reagan DRINKS GAMES- N - MS USE LLOR lUR L 7 P.IVI. large wood AptJ; enter) United Press International ■ COLUMBIA, S.C. — Ronald ■eagan’s least favorite question has to |b with whether he dyes his hair. ■ “Well, for years I have had to put up Ijvith that outright falsehood and base lanard that I dyed my hair,” Reagan, 69, $iud in an interview. “I not only have tijever done that, I didn’t even wear akeup when I made pictures. “That allowed me to sleep an extra tour in the morning. That’s one (unfavo- ijite question), but one that isn’t a ques- Jn — but is a saying — that I’m always <|escribed as an actor who never got the rl. “I always got the girl. I didn’t play in jjiose kind of pictures where I didn’t get e girl,” the leading contender for the lepublican presidential nomination laid. During the 1976 campaign for the OP nomination, then-President erald Ford ribbed Reagan about his “Uir “Ronald Reagan doesn’t dye his Bair, Ford said. “It’s just prematurely ^ange.” Jeff Pomerantz of Dallas was admitted for observation at St. Joseph Hospital in Bryan after crash-landing his plane in a field south of College Station about 12:40 p.m. Sunday. Wounded bird Pomerantz was on his way to Dallas (officials didn’t know from where) when he lost oil pressure in his engine. He belly-landed the plane near Wellborn Road about a mile south of its intersection with FM 2818, the west by-pass. Staff photo by Steve Clark Time is running out Team has until August to complete translations By ANDY WILLIAMS Staff Writer Time is running out for Dr. Kurt Irgolic. His team is translating, abstracting and indexing about a half million pages of pap ers which deal chiefly with making liquid synthetic fuels from coal. But money for the job will be used up by Aug. 31. The German Document Retrieval Pro ject, run by the Center for Energy and Mineral Resources at Texas A&M Univer sity, began in 1975. Its aim was to find and analyze records of the synthetic fuels prog ram in Nazi Germany. The research team found most of the surviving papers about the program, Irgo lic thinks. He says there’s no secret to the process of making liquid fuel out of coal. Friedrich Bergius, a German chemist, won a Nobel Prize in 1931 for discovering that. But, Irgolic said, the German documents will warn engineers about bugs that might show up in their systems. “The value of these papers is in their description of technical, details,” Irgolic said. “Any plant looks very good when it’s designed, but operating it is another matter.” Irgolic says the need for his team’s work is urgent. “Tbe problem really is that the abstracts and indices for these documents need to be available now,” Irgolic said. “We already have a number of second generation coal liquefaction plants in various stages of pro duction.” Nazi Germany’s air force was run entire ly on synthetic fuels, Irgolic said, and their use was widespread in the other branches of the military. Between 1938 and 1945, the country produced 130 million barrels of synthetic fuel. Work on the papers will take time and money. And the translation and abstraction team, which once had 12 employees, is down to four workers, only one of whom is full time. Irgolic said between 5 and 10 percent of the work is done. Irgolic has asked a number of sources for funding. So far, he’s had no luck, though he hinted that he may have found enough to keep going somewhat past the Aug. 31 deadline. The U.S. Department of Energy turned down a request to support the project in 1978, saying the work has already been done. “They think they know it all,” Irgolic said, grinning. Donald Gill, the chief translator, says they don’t. In addition to 306 rolls of microfilm from the National Archives, the Texas A&M team collected information from workers who were involved with the German indus try and a number of other places where documents were stored. “There are three binders full of indices drawn from the microfilm,” Gill said. “But to draw any information from these would take days and days and days.” He said he gets “one or two requests a day” for information about the documents. The team also gathered information ab out a coal liquefaction plant in the town of Louisiana, Mo., which was built shortly after World War II. That operation was closed in 1953 after the House of Represen tatives Appropriations Committee killed its funds. Eventually, Gill hopes that abstracts, or summaries, of all the information the team has gathered can be put into the DOE’s computer base in Tennessee. Another goal is to make a catalog all the important pro cesses, materials, and major scientists re ferred to in the material. But Gill’s not sure he’ll have a chance to finish his work. “As much as I believe in this, I can’t live Baylor publications board will decide fate of editors From Wire Reports WACO — Members of the Baylor Uni versity Student Publications Board meet tonigbt to decide whether to fire three edi tors of the school paper. The editors have taken a public stand against the university president concerning his restrictions on editorials criticizing him. Editors of The Lariat, the student paper, have attacked President Abner McCall’s announcement that any Baylor woman stu dent who poses for Playboy magazine will be suspended. Playboy photographer David Chan is looking for women to pose for a picture spread to be entitled “Girls of the Southwest Conference. McCall has required that all editorials pass through his office for approval before they are printed. One journalism associate professor, Dr. Donald Williams, has quit in protest. But the student publications direc tor and the chairman of the department are siding with McCall. Kent Birdsong, vice president of Baylor’s Student Congress, said Sunday night that there was to be a rally in support of the editors at 3 p.m. today. The Student Con gress voted 20-1 to support McCall Thurs day night, but Birdsong had no vote. “This not a freedom of the press issue,” chairman Dr. Loyal Gould was quoted as saying. “The president of the university is the publisher of the newspaper. He, as publisher, has the same rights to determine what editor shall not advocate as does the publisher of the Dallas News.” Since Baylor is a private school, the pres ident legally may edit the paper himself. At state universities, such as Texas A&M and the University of Texas, the editor-in-chief has the final say on what is printed and cannot be overruled. On Friday, the editors were given the option of either resigning or being fired for attempting to publish an anti administration editorial in the continuing Munroe named UTEP president Dr. Haskell Monroe, dean of faculties and associate vice president for acade mic affairs at Texas A&M University, has been chosen as the new president of the University of Texas-El Paso. The UT System regents chose Mon roe Friday from a field of three candi dates. The group was interviewed in Houston Friday. UTEP’s current president is to resign Aug. 31. Monroe said he expects to take over this summer. Monroe said he knew he was being considered for the job last November and visited the campus in February. Monroe was also a candidate for the presidency at North Texas State Univer sity late Last year. Rice Provost Dr. Frank Vandiver was picked for that job. controversy over Playboy magazine. Lariat student adviser Ralph Strother cut two sentences from an editorial Friday. Lariat editor Jeff Barton said the sentences had already been approved and that Strother cut them “behind our backs, ” The deleted sentences said, “We hope the time has come when the student body will no longer accept the smugness of Dr. McCall’s interpretations. We hope the pro test Wednesday is a sign that students are tired of the arrogant position taken by the administration. ” The second sentence referred to a de monstration that occurred Wednesday. About 100 students marched outside tbe Baylor administration building to protest McCall’s decisions. Journalism students who worked on the paper threatened to quit unless the sent ences were returned. Strother said he, in turn, gave them the option of either res igning or being fired from the Lariat staff. “It’s no longer a question of if they are leaving, just if they resign or want to be fired,” Strother was reported as saying. Only the board, however, has the power to fire the editors, and it will settle the matter tonight. The editors are Barton, Cyndy Slovak and Barry Kolar. “They were obviously looking for a good excuse to get rid of the paper,” Barton was quoted as saying. “It’s a shame Baylor doesn’t realize the value of a good newspap er and instead wants a public relations sheet.” Kids want to join Manson ‘family’ United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — Mass murder er Charles Manson says he can’t under stand why he still gets letters from young people who want to join his ill- fated “family.” The 45-year-old convict, serving his ninth year for nine life sentences for nine murders at the California Medical Facility at Vacaville, says he hasn’t en couraged any of the soulsearching youngsters who reach out to him. “I feel that it is pitiful. Pitiful that society has created such a situation. First of all, I ain’t got a family, there never was a family. That’s another, pro duct of the prosecuting attorney’s fabri cation. “Second, it’s pitiful that the parents aren’t closer to their children so these kids wouldn’t be looking outside their homes for something to join or someone to follow.” Manson, in a series of interviews with Nuel Emmons, a correspondent for the Ukiah Daily Journal who is writing a book on the case, talked about how he says his life has been exploited and sen sationalized. And, the 5-foot-2 inmate maintains steadfastly that he didn’t kill anyone. He was convicted in Los Angeles of directing his followers from a desert re treat to kill actress Sharon Tate and four others on Aug. 9, 1969, and Leo and Rosemary LaBianca the next night. He also was convicted of two other killings. Before the interview questions be gan, Emmons said, Manson told him: “Let me tell you something. I been in prison all my life. I didn’t produce those kids, they are the product of their pa rents and the society of the ’60s. “I didn’t recruit them, it was the other way around. In 1967, I came out of prison a child. It was me looking for guidance and a way of living. The kids took me in. “Through them, I learned how to maneuver and exist on the streets with out starving. They taught me what love and freedom was. All my life, I had nev er experienced either. “At some point, I may have become sort of a pivotal person for them, some one to revolve around, a source of enter tainment and good times, someplace to always return to: “But, from the beginning, my advice was — don’t do anything that will cause us to end up in jail.” Prison authorities say Manson still gets letters every week from disen chanted youngsters, a phenomenon the convict attributes to “prolonged expo sure” and exploitation of his case by the media and such books as “Helter Skel ter,” written by prosecuting attorney Vincent Bugliosi. In addition, he occasionally gets cor respondence from Sandra Goode and Lynnette “Squeaky” Fromme, who made him a shirt that he often wears. Emmons said he was impressed with the intelligence and energy displayed by Manson, who only has a grade school education. “The guy’s a charmer, ’ said Emmons. “I find myself sympathizing with him.