8 The Battalion Serving the University community . 76 No. 129 USPS 045360 20 Pages In 2 Sections College Station, Texas Thursday, April 7, 1983 stronauts to test 2 million spacesuits United Press International jAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Two [tie astronauts prepare to walk in le today to test the $2 million ttoriij lesuits that thwarted a similar ven- l,n S into an open cargo bay five 4 ^onihs ago. jior.9lhe spacewalk, first stroll of luirsjMricans into the silent vacuum in ■ years, is considered a key step Srd a bold mission planned for ■ April when two space-walking ■inauts attempt to repair a crip- sun-watching satellite. Jlight engineers Story Musgrave Donald Peterson expect to spend hours floating about in the 60- otl-long freight compartment, re- Bingto Challenger’s airlock at 7:45 ^Pjtelong-awaited spacewalk is the SM ,,Jbig goal of Challenger’s maiden ...Bon. Musgrave, Peterson and in If™ h pilots Paul Weitz and Karol Bobko are scheduled to wrap up orbital opera tions Friday and glide to a landing Saturday in California’s Mojave De sert. The two spacewalkers got ready Wednesday night for their adven ture. They put on the white, 250- pound spacesuits and gave them a thorough checkout. Musgrave, a spacesuit expert, pronounced them ready to go. The suits provide everything a per son needs on his own in space — ox ygen pressurization, cooling, com munications, drinking water, a food snack and urine collection. Today’s operation was designed to see how well men can move about in the suits in the cargo bay, and how much mobility they have for future repair work. It also gave the astro nauts a chance to inspect some insula tion that ripped away from a maneuv ering rocket pod during Monday’s blastoff. Television from Challenger Wednesday showed the empty payload bay and one of two safety wires that run the length of the hold for the spacewalkers to snap tethers to so they won’t float away from Chal lenger. One minor mystery developed Wednesday when Weitz asked to speak to a flight surgeon. It was the first private medical conference since Monday’s launch, and it suggested one of the crewmen might be ill. Under a new NASA policy, the na ture of the problem is not reported unless it threatens to affect the mis sion’s plans. “I can assure you there is no mis sion impact,” said flight director Gary Coen. Hide! md ics, omail inly j tate senate approves tiding fuel adjustments United Press International AUSTIN — The Texas Senate re- to heed Gov. Mark White’s for statewide election of the iblic Utility Commission, but tem- d the snub with the approval of a hat supporters said would make » I’UC more responsive to con- i r . ■J Bn a voice vote Wednesday, the Kte approved and sent to the Bse a hill that would abolish the datnijBroversial fuel adjustment clause ^ “Utility bills and create an indepen- 1 public counsel to represent con fers in utility rate cases. [However, senators four times ivhelmingly rejected proposals to PUG commissioners, who now ppointed by the governor. ivvd'setBejection of tlie election proposals Stadiuflseen as the first major defeat of legislative session for White, who ima Hied intensively for the proposal econd-J and hinted he might call a special ses sion to push for an elected PUC. “I understand that considerable pressure has been brought to bear on the Legislature by the utility lobby on this issue,” White said in letters to legislators. “Your vote in favor of an elected utility commission would be a state ment that the will of the people is greater than the influence of narrow interests asserted by the utility indus try,” he said. Four amendments proposing va rious schemes for electing the PUC never attracted more than 10 positive Senate votes. Sen. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, a sponsor of the PUC bill that won Sen ate approval, described the reforms as “modest” and warned that the bill should not be weakened in the House. “Much of the changes we are mak ing today are correcting mistakes we made years ago,” Doggett said. “But I don’t think it is one where we can claim even modest reforms if it is further diluted.” In addition to abolishing the fuel adjustment clause and establishing the public counsel, the bill would: •Authorize the PUC to conduct management audits of utilities to de termine if their expenses were war ranted and management decisions sound. •Limit utilities’ abilities to earn a return on their investment in power plants that are under construction and not yet producing power. A re turn on investments for construction work in progress would be considered “exceptional” rate relief. •Require the PUC to create a state wide energy plan detailing Texas’ energy needs in the coming years. •Disallow certain utility expenses, including lobbying efforts and the cost of making refunds to consumers. cean drilling project be directed by A&M ' by Karen Schrimsher Battalion Staff xas A&M has been selected to ta new deep-sea drilling project will provide scientists with data he nature and evolution of the s crust. exas A&M officials said Tuesday the University will become a ma- [enter for scientific ocean drilling, :ting research operations for the sciences community during the | decade. he project will be a continuation :current Deep-Sea Drilling Pro- which has been operated since by Scripps Institution of nography in California. .Tlotat Oceanographic Institutions editor»| - 8 r - - i have ckin $ unanimously selected the Texas ngthe fnebod' M proposal March 31. The cor- ^tion manages the program for Rational Science Foundation. Two project advisers from the De- [ )artment of Oceanography, Dr. Phi- ip D. Rabinowitz and Dr. William R. Bryant, said they are enthusiastic ab out what the project will mean to the University and geoscience students. Rabinowitz said the project will attract a large number of scientists from all over the world, and that the visiting researchers will benefit the University. Bryant said the project will shift the attention of marine geoscientists to ward this part of the country and to ward Texas A&M. The program will employ about 100 persons, including master’s and doctoral degree candidates from the departments of geology, geophysics and oceanography. Some degree can didates will do part of their graduate research in connection with the pro ject. A deep-sea drilling ship capable of reaching depths of 20,000 feet below the ocean surface will be leased for the project. The ship will take sam ples, called cores, from beneath the ocean floor in all parts of the world. The samples will be transported back to Texas A&M to be analyzed and stored. The ship should be in operation by October 1984, so planning and build ing must begin immediately, Rabino witz said. The University has agreed to build a refrigerated core storage building, a drilling operations center and laboratories here. The project has a projected budget of about $30 million, and will be funded by the NSF and several fore ign governments. Rabinowitz said the proposed length for the project is 10 years, but that it could continue indefinitely. jjffi campuses competing e |8 Talent acts to be filmed by Pamela Haisler Battalion Reporter frt Linkletter Productions will be lere Sunday to film a 10-act talent Iw to be shown on Disney Cable (etwork. [Karen Snow, chairman of the iSC Variety Show Committee, said lat at 7 p.m. Sunday, Linkletter roductions will film the talent show ithe main lounge of the Memorial 1 itudent Center. |J' m ^ urc ^’ Variety Show Com- Jn i ttee a( ^ v ' ser ’ sa 'd .J ac k Linkletter fj vill be the host of the show — “Com- f v ng On” — and Snow will be the i-host. “Coming On” will feature ^lent competition from 26 college Hnpuses nationwide. Each campus have its one-hour talent show adcast on the Disney Cable Net- 'ork, he said. Hurd said the 10 acts being pre- 823%iited for filming were chosen by a tent scout from Linkletter Produc tions. Three of the acts that will be plmed also will perform at the MSC vill ibroa fvorl I k Variety Show on April 15. Those acts are the Kappa Pickers, a soror ity singing group; the Stacked Deck, a barbershop quartet; and a come dian. Although the date that “Coming On” will be aired has not been set, anyone can stop by the MSC Sunday night and see it live. Linkletter Pro ductions requested that a crowd of at least 250 persons be present for the filming. For those who can’t make the filming, the fourth annual Variety Show will be held at 7:30 p.m. April 15 in Rudder Auditorium. Snow said 11 acts, ranging from “doggers” — folk dancers — to com edians and vocalists will vie for trophies and cash prizes. Jeff Dunham, a professional ven triloquist and student at Baylor Uni versity, will serve as master of cere monies, Snow said. Dunham recent ly won first place in the All America Collegiate Talent Search contest held in Las Cruces, N.M. The Stacked Deck, last year’s Variety Show winners, will provide entertainment at the show. The group was first runner-up to Dunham in the All America Collegi ate competition. Snow said the present Variety Show began in 1951 as a talent com petition. The winner went on to compete in a regional talent show. In 1966, the talent show ended, but returned in 1979 as a Variety Show sponsored by the MSC. Any Texas A&M student is eligi ble to compete in the talent audi tions held in February, she said. This year, 48 acts auditioned for the Variety Show. The 11 finalists will compete for first, second and third places and the winner will go on to compete in the All America Collegi ate Talent Search competition. Tickets for the variety show are on sale at the MSC Box Office and cost $3 for students and $3.50 for non-students. All seats are reserved. Is it over yet? staff photo by Eric Evan Lee Jeff Graeber, a junior philosophy major from Spring, lets out a yelp while giving blood Wednesday at one of the Wadley Blood Bank mobile units. Wadley units have been on campus all week and will be taking blood donations through today. Yell leader race settled by Kelley Smith Battalion Staff Results from last week’s junior yell leader elections were made official and posted Wednesday after a re quest by candidate James C. Becker that the election not be rerun. Kelly Joseph, an accounting major from Round Rock, and Terry Hla- vinka, an agricultural economics ma jor from East Bernard, won the elec tion. Joseph received 27.7 percent of the vote. Hlavinka received 20 per cent. Becker, a management major from Lake Jackson whose name was added to the ballot after elections opened, came in fifth with 11.5 per cent of the vote. When election officials discovered that Becker’s name was not on the ballot, 516 votes already had been cast for junior yell leader. Becker said that if his name had been on the ballot he probably only would have received 300 of those votes. Becker was 800 votes away from second place. “A reasonable margin to protest the vote would have been 300 votes,” Becker said. When the votes were counted, Election Commissioner Les Asel was unable to contact Becker to discuss the outcome. Asel gave Becker a 1,000 vote margin and decided to re run the election. “I felt that was unfair and exces sive,” Becker said of the 1,000-vote margin. “I felt the victory was decisive enough that it was a real victory.” He added that it would be unfair to Joseph and Hlavinka to rerun the election. Other- candidates were: Darrell Pickard, a psychology major from San Antonio, who received 13.3 percent of the vote; Tom King, an accounting/ finance major from Houston, 11.82 percent; Russell McCaskill, a market ing major from Arlington, 11.4 per cent; Frank Reister, an agricultural economics major from El Paso, 2.3 percent; and Gregory W. Simank, a mechanical engineering major from Houston, 1.8 percent. Other candidates in the race still may appeal until 2 p.m. Friday — 48 hours after the posting, Asel said. The two other races where names were left off the ballot — engineering senator at-large and sophomore en gineering senator — will be rerun Tuesday during runoff elections. Poison found in Easter toy United Press International SHREVEPORT, La. — A federal consumer protection agency has been placed on nationwide alert to investi gate the sales and distribution of im ported stuffed chicks and ducklings possibly laced with enough arsenic to kill a 200-pound man. Some of the chicks tested con tained arsenic levels high enough to kill an adult, but the person would have to eat the stuffed bird to ingest an immediately fatal amount of the poison, a toxicologist said. Dan Sowards, chief of Hazardous Products Control for the Texas De partment of Health, said enough arsenic was found in the chicks, im ported from China, to kill a 200- pound man. Louisiana officials began gather ing the stuffed birds Wednesday to test for the toxic substance, and a large wholesale-retail firm in Texas removed the chicks and ducks from shelves in two stores. The Texas wholesale-retail distri butor, Marshall Pottery Inc., said Wednesday its two stores had sold thousands of the chicks in Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas. Texas health officials said the agency’s regional office in Dallas was canvassing the product’s distribution. There have been no reports of arsenic poisoning from the birds, which distributors said were stuffed after hatching dead at China hen farms. The birds were designed for use in floral arrangements and not as toys, but some were used to decorate Easter baskets. Arab leaders called to emergency meeting United Press International Arab leaders have been summoned to an emergency meeting next weekend in Morocco where Palestine Liberation Organization officials want to forge a united stand against President Reagan’s Middle East peace initative. Moroccan envoy Ahmad Bin Suda announced the April 16 summit in Fez, Morocco after meeting PLO chief Yasser Arafat in Kuwait Wednesday, the Kuwaiti News Agen cy reported. “The planned summit follows a PLO request for a decisive and speedy stand (by the Arab world) on the pre vailing situation in the region,” Suda said. On Tuesday, Arafat refused to give Jordan’s King Hussein the go- ahead to enter talks with Israel on behalf of the Palestinians as contem plated by Reagan’s Sept. 1 peace in itiative. “We will ask the next Arab summit to adopt a unified Arab stand against American Middle East policy which is hostile to us and our rights,” top PLO official Yasser Abd Rabbo told repor ters in Kuwait. PLO officials said they wanted the Arab summit to reaffirm the main points of an Arab League peace plan that calls for an independent Palesti nian state and declares the PLO the sole representative of the Palestinian people. inside Around Town 4 Classified 6 Local 3 Opinions 2 Sports 11 State 5 National 9 Police Beat 4 What’s up 14 forecast Cloudy to partly cloudy skies today with a 20 percent chance of show ers and a high of 63. For tonight, a 50 percent chance of thunder storms with a low near 49. Cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thun dershowers Friday morning, and a high near 64.