attalioo/Pajs June 29, H th ss The Battalion Serving the University community 75 No. 167 USPS 045360 12 Paqes College Station, Texas Wednesday, June 30, 1982 a and Price i ■evealed their netics confeti ate Universn :l their stu tners with s and edm ;r relationshi) surprised tli said, was jr uerrillas ■ dlowed leave ■ : -l() iship of [off compatabiliiil irs MTWThF AVThF ies United Press International Israel offered to let Palestinian erffllas leave besieged west Beirut th their “personal weapons” if they it Lebanon for good, but a PLO ftcial declared his organization idy for bloody all-out street hting. In Christian east Beirut, the pow- Ful Israeli-allied Lebanese Front re ted Palestine Liberation Organiza- n Chairman Yasser Araf at’s prop- rl to integrate some of his 6,()()() errillas into the Lebanese army be- evacuating the rest from banon. Israel earlier had demanded the errillas surrender their weapons to ; Lebanese army and leave under d Cross supervision for Syria or y other Arab state. Despite the new Israeli proposal dthe cease-fire holding a fifth day, re was little evidence U.S.-backed plomatic efforts had narrowed the ferences between Jerusalem and : Palestinians trapped in the banese capital. A U.S. government survey released Washington indicated nearly half of the 3 million people in war-torn banon are in need of some kind of Imanitarian aid. I “We are getting more and more tin impression the negotiations are no; advancing as they should at this ■ge,” a senior Israeli official said. ■ Israeli Prime Minister Menachem ■gin, winning approval from parlia- pm to continue the siege, Tuesday lliierated his demand the Palesti- Kans leave Beirut. B Referring to Arafat, Begin said: ■hey don’t deserve mercy, particu- Blythat one with the stubble on his Be, the despicable murderer of chil- drm.” ■But Begin added, “We don’t want to! umiliate them (the Palestinians)... «n criminals are human beings. B“We are ready to let the terrorists Icp their personal weapons .” ■“Patience,” Begin told the Knesset, ■hey he Palestinians) will leave jirut in a day or two. A PLO official in Moslem west m birut said the guerrillas were pre- *$27.75 - $29$ - $33.71 -$39.71 1 Sizes ailable % Discount Of The Tf mity. tared for an Israeli attack. “We’re ready for it,” the official &id. “They actually believe once they ill the bandleaders the hand is dead.” .-.Jibe offidaL claimed one-third of Bead CM* }e executive committee of the PLO is |ially outside Beirut, so even a suc- sful attack on Beirut would not li- [uidate the'PLO leadership. In rejecting Arafat’s proposal to tegrate the PLO into the Lebanese Itiy, Lebanese Front spokesman Irre Yazbek told United Press In- Inational: “No way. This is a ridicu- Itis. It is a maneuver to implicate the anese army which has so far iyed out of things.” l The rejection came before Ibanese Prime Minister Che fie Waz- huddled with Arafat Tuesday. Iro high-ranking PLO military com- anders also met with Lebanese (my intelligence chief Johnny y Staff photo by Diana Sultenfuss Today is Dr. Frank W.R. Hubert’s last day as chancellor of the Texas A&M University System. See related stories and photographs on pages 6 and 7. Shuttle’s belly facing sun to dry tiles United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The shuttle Columbia circled the world with its bottom side facing the.sun early today to bake out any water still in its heat-shield tiles from a pre launch Florida downpour. Mission Control said the decision to maintain the “bottom sun” position instead of conducting a long tail-to- sun thermal test was to make sure all the water is gone from the fragile tiles before Sunday’s return to Earth. Officials said chances are good the tiles are completely dry from 10 hours of earlier solar baking, and the latest sun-soak was just a precaution. “There is no potential for catas trophe,” Thomas Moser, a specialist on the shuttle’s heat shielding, said Tuesday. Moser said the worst that could happen would be the surfaces of some tiles might pop off due to ice in them turning to steam during the searing heat of re-entry. Columbia was hit by a gale-force hailstorm on the launch pad Saturday night while waiting for Sunday’s lif toff. The hail jabbed some 400 tiles, allowing water to soak into them. The winged spaceship has moved past the 1 million mile mark and was operating beautifully on mission No. 4 — better than ever, said one flight director. Astronauts Thomas “Ken” Mat tingly and Henry Hartsfield also were doing well. Both were reported in good health and excellent spirits as they neared the midway point of the seven-day mission. One of Hartsfield’s main jobs to day was to add to the biological find ings that have delighted scientists who want to make medicines in space. Mattingly had a variety of chores including more operations of the sec ret Pentagon payload in the cargo hold, tests to see if the ship’s radiators work as well folded down as they do in their normal position and a star track ing exercise for navigational pur poses. The space drug processor de veloped by the McDonnell Douglas Co. in St. Louis operated for nearly 7 hours Monday and proved the pro cess of electrophoresis works far bet ter in weightlessness than on Earth in separating biological materials from a solution. “We are very, very pleased with both the performance of the machine itself and also the performance of the astronaut crew,” James Rose, the McDonnell Douglas project manager, said after Monday’s run. Three solutions were processed Monday containing a material the company will not discuss because of its potential commercial value. To day’s samples, however, were straightforward mixtures of complex egg and rat proteins called albumins mixed in slightly acidic water. The aim of today’s runs was to demonstrate the machine’s ability to separate large concentrations of materials. On Earth, the machine can handle only very weak solutions be fore gravity fouls up the. electric field separation process. Tuesday was the busiest day in orbit for Mattingly and Hartsfield. They completed operation of a pollu tion monitor around the spaceship as well as numerous tests with the ship’s robot arm. Flight director Harold Draughon said the crew worked “like gangbusters.” “It got kind of hectic there for a while but it all seemed to come out pretty good,” Mattingly said before the crew turned in shortly after 8 p.m. “We think you guys really did a super job,” replied George Nelson in Houston control. “We got everything we planned plus a lot more done today.” “Who knows what we might get done tomorrow,” Mattingly said. Reagan to hold conference tonight M United Press International | WASHINGTON — President eagan faces the nation tonight in a Revised news conference that likely focus on two Cabinet members M the war in Lebanon. Reagan is expected to be pep- :red with questions about the brupt resignation of Secretary of ate Alexander Haig and a special vestigation that found no grounds indict Labor Secretary Raymond 'onovan. The nationally broadcast news nference, the 11th of Reagan’s Residency and his first since May 3, is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. *DT. Aides said before Reagan steps efore the cameras, the White louse may issue a statement on the eport released Monday by the spe- |al prosecutor who examined alle- 9tions that Donovan had under world ties. Special Prosecutor Leon Silver- >an concluded there was “insuffi- ient credible evidence” to return ny indictments. But, he said, the umerous allegations linking Dono- an to mob figures “must occasion a Used eyebrow.” White House spokesman Larry peakes has said the White House ould read the report and said: We’ll pass judgment.” There has been no firm word from the White House on whether Donovan would remain with the administration. While Reagan has been updated on the Donovan matter this week, he has also been receiving reports from Middle East mediator Philip Habib on negotiations between the war ring factions in Lebanon. Speakes told reporters: “We’re in close and constant touch;” but he said because the talks were of “ex treme sensitivity,” no progress re port would be forthcoming from the White House. His statements have been con fined to expressing pleasure that the cease-fire in Lebanon has been holding. Thus far, the White House has refused to say what triggered Haig’s resignation last week, although spe culation persists it was seeded in sev eral clashes over policy and person ality conflicts. Haig’s selected successor, former Nixon Cabinet official George Shultz, is making the rounds on Capitol Hill in preparation for his Senate confirmation hearing. Speakes said the date of Haig’s departure had not been formally worked out, but he appeared to be preparing for an exit by the end of the week. Think tank to take fresh directions with new leader by Terry Duran Battalion Staff The head of an industrial economic research group says he hopes to point his 35-year-old think tank organiza tion in new directions — and maybe make a profit. Dr. Stan Madden heads the In dustrial Economics Research Group, a part of the Business and Technolo gy Research Division of the Texas En gineering Experiment Station. The IERG is a research group with a small staff nucleus that “can draw on facul ty expertise to solve any particular problem,” Madden said. Madden is the first person in the College of Business to head the group, which was formerly in the Center for Strategic Research, also a part of TEES. The group had always been headed by a staff member of TEES before Madden’s appointment by Dean of the College of Business Administration William V. Muse. Madden took over the group in late spring under an agreement between the business college and TEES. Simultaneous administrative re shuffling pulled the research group out of CST’s jurisdiction and estab lished links with the College of Busi ness, while remaining part of TEES. Now that those links have been established, Madden said, the group will concentrate on specific areas, rather than the “scattergun approach” taken earlier. “(The group) had done a lot of dif ferent things, depending on leader ship and current constitution of the group,” Madden said. “There was no specific direction — it was hard to tell people just exactly what (the IERG) did. They just hammered on whatev er worked ... mostly fact books, input- output studies and similar stuff.” IERG research associate Marilyn Green says fact books are publications done for cities that analyze and cata log resources and conditions in that area. Green thinks some part of the group will probably continue to pro duce the fact books for communities that request them. Each fact book costs the recipient city between about $5,000 and $25,000, depending on what the community wants, its size and its location. The fact book for the Bryan-College Station area is normal ly updated every two years. Green said the group worked with the Texas Water Resources Depart ment on an input-output study to de termine how much water the state and industry would need in the near future. Another project the IERG under took was an industrial park proposal for the city of Big Spring. The U.S. Air Force decommissioned Webb Air Force Base in 1977, and the research group recommended land use plans for some of the facilities and sug gested a reorganization of the city’s industry-recruiting organization. Big Spring City Manager Don Davis said Tuesday that the reorgani zation had been accomplished, but that the land use recommendations were still untouched, even though “everyone was satisfied with the work.” Davis said Big Spring was not yet large enough to require develop ment, but that the gist of the plan would probably be used when the time came. Madden said the new directions he envisions for the research group will probably make the organization financially self-supporting to some extent. Madden’s plans include: — Expanding involvement in strategic planning for cities and local governments in general — for exam ple, how to attract industry to a cer tain area. — Increasing involvement in mar ket feasibility studies. The group already has a bid in to look at the feasibility of building a series of low to moderate income housing by a local developer; the developer wants to know the best way to develop so the market will absorb his project. See ECONOMIC page 5 inside Classified 5 Local 3 National 4 Opinions 2 Sports 9 State 3 What’s Up 3 forecast Today’s Forecast: Sunny, hot and humid through Friday. High today of 93. Low tonight of 76. Slight chance of afternoon thun dershowers.