Battalion Serving the Texas A&M University community , Vol. 74 No. 132 ^ 14 Pages in 1 Section ■T Friday, April 10, 1981 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 The Weather Today Tomorrow High . . 85 High 86 Low 68 Chance of rain. . . . 20% [•Problems delay shuttle launch 3 I United Press International APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A puz- g problem in the space shuttle’s vital tronie brains today forced a prob- Ip two-day delay in the launch of onauts John W. Young and Robert )rippen on the first orbital test flight :he Columbia. ji'oung and Crippen spent more than I hours lying uncomfortably on their |ks in the shuttle’s cockpit, only to n that they will have to do it all over in. |The problem concerned one of five nputers in the revolutionary spa- |hip, the most advanced manned spa- ihip ever built. The pesky computer unable to communicate with the ler computers. The countdown had come to within le minutes of blastoff at 6:50 a. m. IT when the computer problem de- loped. Hugh Harris, the launch control iokesman, said the earliest date the Rronauts could take off on the shuttle’s ftiden test flight was 6:50 a. m. Sun- Say. However, the problem must be isolved before the ship can be cleared u takeoff. I Crew fatigue was the overriding fac tor in the decision to call off today’s launch try. K After engineers in Houston reported ho joy” in an attempt to clear up the mputer problem, launch director eorge Page and Richard Smith, dire- or of the Kennedy Space Center, lade the “scrub” decision. The Columbia is the world’s first usable spaceship. Its launch had been it back more than 2 Vi years by a variety of technical problems. Today’s prob- ms, however, were of the kind not [nexpected on a new spacecraft during ie final hours of the countdown to nnch. How are you holding out up there?” 'ageasked the astronauts at one point. ‘Just laying here, you know,” replied Young, the veteran flight commander who was strapped on his back in his pacecraft seat, a position doctors have said the crew could hold for no more 'jthan six hours. “Getting uncomfortable at all?’ Page iked. “Were getting there, George,” Young replied after a long pause. “We’re getting there.” The Columbia is the first manned spaceship to rely so heavily oh compu ters to perform critical operations. There are four redundant main compu ters and then the backup which could take over to perform the most critical functions if all the other units failed. The countdown was first held be cause of a fuel cell generator problem that turned out to be insignificant. But there was more concern about the com puter problem. » They were the first problems of any significance in the final hours of the countdown for the oft-delayed launch of the winged space freighter. Young, 50, a veteran of four spacef lights, and space rookie Crippen, 43, crawled into Columbia’s two-level cabin at at 4:19 a. m., after smiling and waving to space port workers when they left their quarters. “You wouldn’t believe all the chow we have packed on this thing,” Young said on a communications link to groundcontrol center shortly after en tering the spaceship’s lower deck where the food is stored. “The crew is in fine shape,” said George Abbey, director of flight crew operations. “They had a good rest last night. We re looking for a real good flight.” They are the first Americans to ven ture into space since 1975, and the first to fly a space ship not preceded by an unmanned test flight. Successful completion of the 54V2- hour orbital flight will open a new era of lower cost space travel and increased space capability. The shuttle will be come the nation’s orbital workhorse, hauling civilian and military satellites regularly to and from orbit. President Reagan, who before the attempt on his life had planned to watch the blastoff in person, said in a message to Young and Crippen before launch they carried the “hopes and prayers of all Americans.” “Through you, today, we feel as giants once more,” the president said. “As you hurtle from Earth in a craft unlike any other ever constructed, you will do so in a feat of American technolo gy and American will.” The astronauts were to reach a safe orbit 44 minutes after blastoff and circle the Earth 36 times, gliding to a landing at 1:18 p.m. EST Sunday on the broad expanses of a dry lake bed at Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California. lommittee OKs efense budget United Press International WASHINGTON — Senate budget witers Thursday approved the full mount President Reagan asked for de- 'ense, but their House counterparts ipurned administration requests and pumped more money into food prog rams and Medicaid. The Senate Budget Committee, dominated by Republicans, voted 11-9 to approve $193.9 billion for the 1982 defense budget. Reagan originally- asked for $188.8 billion, but the Con gressional Budget Office re-estimated the request at the higher figure. The House Budget Committee — in voice votes that generally fell along par ity lines — rejected the president’s proposed cap on federal Medicaid spending and restored $1.7 billion for nutrition programs. The Democratic-controlled commit tee restored $1.1 billion to Medicaid, lexplaining in a budget document that the cap “could result in reduced health care services to the poor. ” The House panel also put back $650 million into the food stamp program, f$800 million into school lunches and $300 million to fund fully a nutrition jprogram for pregnant women and in fants. Even with the restorations, part of the Democratic budget alternative offered by Chairman James Jones, D- Okla., food stamps and school lunches will be cut substantially. In approving the defense figure, the Senate budget panel defeated an un usual coalition of two liberal Democrats and three fiscally conservative Republi cans — Don Riegle, D-Mich.; Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio; Nancy Kasse- baum, R-Kan.; William Armstrong, R- Colo.; and Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn. — who sought lower amounts for defense. The panel also quashed a motion by Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, to add $500 million to Reagan’s request. “It would be a terrible thing when Russian troops are poised on the Polish border to reduce the president’s budget,” Tower said. This country is in enormous military danger at the moment,” said Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., a vigorous opponent of cuts in social prog rams. “Watch the Russians strangle the freedom of the Polish. This is a time to tell the president we re behind him on defense.” But Armstrong said, “There is no more serious threat to the defense capa bility of this country than inflation.” He said the lower defense figures were necessary to help balance the budget by 1984, Reagan’s goal. It was clear the sentiment of the en tire committee favored increases in de fense spending. The smallest amount proposed — $191.6 billion, by Riegle — was still an increase of $32.2 Million over President Jimmy Carter’s budget. The conservative Senate budget panel decided last week to cut $37 bil lion from the overall administration budget, and now is acting on funding for specific programs. In the House, Democratic leaders arranged to meet privately to decide what defense figures to offer in the Budget Committee, which their party dominates. The panel is drafting a Democratic alternative to the 1982 budget and restoring some of the funds Reagan wants slashed. The Senate budget panel, in a break with Reagan, said Wednesday it pre dicts a $60 billion budget deficit in 1982 and 1983, and a $51 billion shortfall in 1984. Reagan predicts a $45 billion de ficit next year, with the budget balanced by 1984. The House Budget Committee Wednesday voted to keep alive several agencies marked for extinction — the Legal Services Corporation, which pro vides legal aid to the poor; the Econo mic Development Administration and the National Consumer Cooperative Bank. House Speaker Thomas O’Neill, D- Mass., said Thursday Democrats have managed so far “to salvage some of the programs” they support, but he was un certain whether conservatives would derail their effort on the House floor. If accepted in total, the Democratic package would restore more than $7 bil lion Reagan wants cut from social prog rams in fiscal 1982 and would reduce the defense budget increase Reagan seeks by $4.3 billion. Reagan’s budget would slash $48.6 billion from proposed 1982 spending. Kenneth Ballard, a blind senior psychology major, suffered bruises after falling into a 10-foot hole, dug to repair pipes, in the sidewalk in front of the Plant Sciences Building. String was tied around the hole, but by the time Ballard felt the string he was already falling. Ironically, Ballard was on his way home Thursday night from speak ing on problems blind students have on the Texas A&M campus. 74 indictments made in Brazos Co un ty drug in ves tiga tion By PHYLLIS HENDERSON Battalion Staff Twenty-seven adults and one juvenile were in dicted for the delivery of controlled substances and delivery of marijuana by the Brazos County Grand Jury Thursday. The grand jury also handed down 46 sealed indict ments. These indictments are the culmination of an undercover operation conducted by the Department of Public Safety Narcotics Service, the Bryan Police Department, the College Station Police Department and the Brazos County SherifTs Office during January, February and March, Sergeant Rick Stewart, with the DPS Narcotics Service, said Thursday at a news con ference. The departments spent approximately $11,300 in By NANCY FLOECK Battalion Reporter If the Corps of Cadets thought their march to the Brazos was rough, they should have been in Karl Haupt’s group. Haupt and 13 other students from Texas A&M University at Galveston ran from the Texas Clipper to the Brazos River in conjuction with the Corps March to the Brazos Saturday. The march is an annual fund raising event for the March of Dimes. Haupt, a senior marine science major, said they reached the Brazos at 10:15 a.m. Saturday, about 25 hours after they left Galveston and an hour before the Corps arrived. “No one was there,” he said. “It was a very ungla- mourous entrance.” The students ran the 150 or so miles in five-mile stints; one person ran while the others rode, slept and the operation, most of which was used in the buying of these drugs by undercover agents, Stewart said. The drugs involved in the operation included cocaine, quaaludes, angel dust, hashish and mari juana, he said. Forty people were to be involved in the arrest and booking of the suspects Thursday night, Stewart said. Seven 4-man arrest teams were assigned to bring in three or four defendants each, he said. “Hopefully, it will go very smoothly,” Stewart said. “Occasionally you do have people who react violently. Some of these people do have the potential to hurt police officers. Hopefully that won’t happen.” Stewart said the purpose of the investigation was to deter the narcotics sales in the area and to make the rested in a University-owned van. Haupt said they averaged about 13 nine-minute miles per person. “One guy ran 22 (miles), but everyone ran their share,” he said. “Morale for everyone was tremen dous.” But the runners’ nerves suffered because of the slow pace, Haupt said. However, their nervous energy had some release: “We got lost on the the Katy-Hockley exit,” he said, “so that was pretty exciting. ” Besides some hassle from motorists, Haupt said, the runners encountered little trouble along the high ways. “There was really no problem,” he said. “We car ried a baton the whole way—that was good for fending off dogs.” Once there, the students didn’t participate in the Corps games, Haupt said. They left, showered and public aware of the drug problem in the community. “It’s a very real problem,” Stewart said. “I would estimate ... 40 to 45 percent usage among the young people in this community.” He said drug usage had even reached the junior high school level. Stewart said the investigation had been able to un cover some major drug suppliers and drug rings. “I think there are some major suppliers involved,” he said. “Three, or possibly four, of these people are major suppliers in the Brazos County area. Among the 28 people indicted, Stewart said, there were probably five or six groups or rings. Stewart said the result of the indictments will be a reduction in drug-dealing for a short time. “They’ll (dealers) remain fearful for a period of time, ” he said. others run returned to the Brazos — a little late for some of the fun. “We just glimpsed the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders before they left,” he said. This is the third year Texas A&M-Galveston stu dents have made the run. Haupt said only eight out of about 18 finished the first year. Haupt said interest and support at the Galveston campus has grown since then. “We have a lot of personal support,” he said. “Everyone wanted to know how everybody did—who ran how far.” That support included the University providing the students with a van, gasoline and excused absences from classes Friday. And pledges provided the students with over $400 to donate to the March of Dimes. Most importantly, Haupt said, it was fun coming to College Station and visiting and partying with friends. Some march to Brazos,