(Wem Texas A8cM zed 12.5 officers tf ers at the was Ei 1 ■s fi eroin, 2 ingposahlil s uptojW Flores alsol Paso, penalty ess will >in is 15 w )00 fine# said. Serving the University community 'ol. 76 No. 163 USPS 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, June 21, 1983 rbit lowered, tellite ready United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Sally 1 ide and her colleagues aboard the I mttle Challenger today activated a 'est German test satellite they will unth and retrieve Wednesday, and ter lowered their orbit a few' miles n Satellite operations. / [The high-spirited crew members America’s seventh space shuttle ighi were obviously enjoying their livide, dAljd day in space. The spaceship, he said'‘■ n g Earth at more than 17,000 he chalk ph was performing almost flaw- da for (\:My everythin® S ’s fun up here,” said mission ander Robert Crippen, who n the first shuttle two years ago. ed the ship’s twin maneuvering ional 1 igines Monday morning in the first ’hich hasldlo firings to drop the orbit down n’s prinuii|lFl miles above Earth. Then he iliticaldeitwlied the air pressure in the cabin :es. a test for space walking prepara- oth, presifo on future missions. DOOmerTThe satellite remaining in Challen- te, told -It’s cargo compartment is a boxy at a Ter, fait built by a West German com- uesday tit by as a platform for rent to anyone be"cumbnHwairits to fly instruments in space, d inequMfls called SPAS for shuttle pallet itellite. Fabian told mission control that he ivated the SPAS systems ahead of tedule and said, “It looks real good more tkjmorning.” he satellite carries 1 1 scientific lid the trip® engineering experiments and ontothei v fh were being operated while the ®orm remained anchored to the utile’s open cargo bay. frig that if ;Wde and Fabian will use the ship’s iy and bB ()0t mechanical arm Wednesday hopefully pt the 3,307-pound assembly out nor,"slieJ| e payload bay and drop it off in space. They will retrieve it later and bring it back to Earth. The arm was successfully tested Sunday. The morning radio-teleprinter message sent up to the astronauts re ported the two communications satel lites launched over the weekend were in “great shape.” “Good morning, TFNG plus 1,” the message said, referring to the “Thirty Five New Guys” slogan Ride, Hauck, Thagard and Fabian have adopted. They, and 31 other men and women, are all members of the astro naut class of 1978. Crippen is the “plus one” — he joined NASA in 1969. The big job today is to operate an experimental medicine-making machine that its commercial develop ers hope will lead to the production of a hormone in a few years to treat a disease caused by a hormone defi ciency. The specific hormone and condition remains a trade secret. Challenger returns home Friday with an unprecedented landing on the 3-mile runway at the Kennedy Space Center launch site. President Reagan plans to greet the returning space crew. The main goal of the $250 million mission, the second for Challenger, was completed during the weekend with the launching of two communi cations satellites for which NASA earned $24 million. The astronauts released a Cana dian communications satellite nine and a half hours after blastoff Satur day that is expected to inaugurate satellite-to-home television service this fall. The craft launched Sunday will expand telephone and television links to the thousands of islands mak ing up Indonesia. Sunny study break staff photo by Peter Rocha Lance Stricklin, a sophomore mechanical engineering major from Houston, catches up on his reading and tanning Monday afternoon at Kyle Field. More sunny weather is expected this week. CS Board hears plan change plea; TABS results reported Ruling stifles ew draft law United Press International W. PAUL, Minn. — Young men llniot have to register for the draft i collect student financial aid be- they would be forced to incri- kte themselves, a U.S. district d|e said in a ruling against the fed- [government. 1 Koslowe, special assistant Qrney general, had asked for a stay i injunction against a new federal spending an appeal. Koslowe said “week the Justice Department |ld appeal directly to the U.S. Sup- Court. U.S. District Judge Donald Alsop Monday the government failed §rove the draft registration prog ram would suffer irreparable harm if his injunction overturning the law goes into effect. The law was sche duled to go into effect July 1. He said the law violates the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution because it would force men to incri minate themselves when applying for federal aid. The Minnesota Civil Liberties Un ion filed suit on behalf of three anonymous Minnesota students who said they had not registered and would be denied financial aid for col lege this fall unless the law was over turned or changed/ by Scott Griffin Battalion Staff Representatives from the First Baptist Church in College Station ex pressed discontent at one of the city’s zoning plans and urged the College Station School Board Monday night to use their influence in changing the plan. The complaint involves a field at the corner of F.M. 2818 and Welsh which has been zoned for small businesses. Tom Taylor and Jeff Cowan, spokesmen for the church, said the current zoning plan calls for part of the land to be zoned for small busines ses which are not “conducive to the area.” Cowan said the city has zoned part of the land to allow a variety of small businesses to build in the area. Cowan added that some of these businesses might be liquor stores or pool halls, which he felt were undesirable be cause of the close proximity to the church and A&M Consolidated High School. Both Cowan and Taylor said they want the area to be zoned for small neighborhood businesses which would be compatible to surrounding establishments. Since the land in question is near the high school, they wanted help from the school board in asking the city to reconsider the zoning. The zoning commission has already zoned the area as C3 — a lot that allows virtually any type of small business to build in the area. Cowan said the group has not taken their complaint to the city, and they fear construction of other businesses will begin if help isn’t pro vided by the school board soon. The school board also reviewed the results of the Texas Assessment of Basic Skills exam. The test is designed to measure the curriculum areas of reading, writing and math and are based on specific objectives developed for Texas stu dents in the third, fifth and ninth grade levels. Michael Owens, director of curri culum and instruction for the district, said the results indicate that College Station students did well on the “exit level” tests. Owens said the “exit level” test focuses on the essential skills a student should master before gra duating from high school. At the ninth grade level, 97 percent of the students mastered the addition and subtraction of whole numbers, while ninety-four percent mastered multiplication and division of whole numbers. Ninety-two percent were able to solve problems using money, 96 percent mastered map reading and 95 percent interpreting charts. “Overall, 90 percent of our stu dents mastered the total mathematics test,” Owens said. Owens did point out, however, that the students had trouble using frac tions, mixed numbers and solving personal finance problems. Sixty- seven percent solved the fraction problems, while only 62 percent solved the personal finance problems. In reading, 94 percent of the stu dents passed the test. Ninety-six per cent mastered following written dire ctions and 97 percent mastered using parts of a book. In writing, 99 percent passed the legibility portion of the exam, while 98 percent mastered composition and 96 percent were able to spell correct ly. The numbers for punctuation were slightly less encouraging, with 84 percent passing. Mastery totals for the fifth and third grade levels were not available from the Texas Education Agency. In other action: —- the board awarded a bank bid to United Bank of College Station. The bid indicates that the school district will continue to bank at United for the next two years. — the board approved a request for use of district facilities for six months by five churches. !RS sed ting Foot 3 ltisll 17:1 eath row inmate killed after attacking officer ate i 3DAY 5PECIAL ed Steak Gravy atoes and ne oilier ible ad andB# ,r Tea United Press International IVINGSTON — Death row in- Ovide Joseph Dugas, convicted murder in the slayings of five nbers of his ex-wife’s family, was to death Monday by an invesdga- he stabbed during an escape impt. Jefferson County District Attor- ty’s investigator Russell Landry lanaged to fire two shots that struck ugas after he stabbed Landry with a [eu of metal Monday while the in- igator was returning Dugas from aumont to the state prison near Inity. Landry was rushed back to Beaumont, where he was listed in stable condition. He underwent ex ploratory surgery at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, said nursing supervisor Ann McClain. Dugas, 37, was convicted five years ago of the murder of 2 year-old Jason Phillips of Woodward, Okla. He was charged but never tried in the deaths of the boy’s parents and his grandpa rents, who were all abducted from the elder couple’s home in Winnie. Dugas used a key to free himself from his handcuffs Monday morning. Jeffer son County District Attorney James McGrath said an investigation would be held into how he got the key. McGrath said Landry was stabbed with a 4-inch-long prison-made shovel. A second similar piece of met al was found hours later at the scene by a cameraman from Houston televi sion station KTRK, which caused in vestigators to speculate that Dugas had more than one weapon. Dugas had been in Beaumont since Friday for questioning about Linda May Burnett, 34, a married mother of three whom Dugas was dating at the time of the killings. ' She is to be re-tried next month in the death of Martha Phillips, Jason’s mother. Burnett’s trial was moved to San Antonio because of extensive media coverage of her 1979 convic tion and death sentence for killing Jason. That conviction has been over turned, but prosecutors decided to try her for the mother’s death before having a retrial in the boy’s death. Dugas was not expected to testify in that case. Dugas, Landry and investigator Pat Hayes were en route back to the Ellis Unit near Trinity when the incident occurred at Boswell’s Grocery and Service Station on U.S. 190 in Living ston about 11 a.m. “They stopped at a filling station to use the rest room,” said a spokesman for McGrath. “Mr. Landry was going to put Dugas in the front seat so Mr. Hayes could watch him. “When Mr. Landry got Dugas out of the backseat of the car, Dugas lunged at him with some kind of makeshift weapon. We were told it was some kind of a wire that had been pointed on one end and had a handle at the other. “He stabbed Mr. Landry in the abdomen. As he was running away, Mr. Landry fired two shots at Dugas,” the spokesman said. “Dugas ran be hind the filling station and fell to the ground. We found him lying on the ground with a key to the handcuffs.” Jason Phillips was abducted with his parents, Elmer and Martha Phil lips of Woodward, Okla., and grand parents, Bishos and Esther Phillips, from the grandparents’ Winnie home. All were shot and buried in a shallow grave. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reversed Burnett’s conviction because the trial judge erred in admitting into evidence a tape recording made during a de fense psychiatrist’s interview. Flexibility important when choosing career; Student Counseling Center aids with testing JPE* EVENIlij EYI with Sauce Dressing ; ad - Bet*' rTea iravy lice ok enf stable ditor’s note: This is the first of a bvee-part series on the Texas A&M fudent Counseling Service. by Robert McGlohon Battalion Staff Half of all college students, five ars after graduation, work in a reer field other than the one for hich they trained, says Dr. Ron wis, associate director of the :xas A&M Student Counseling rvice, and that makes flexibility e new watchword in career de- lopment. “Flexibility is extremely impor- nt because we know that studies ive shown that people change reers an average of three, five, ven times in a lifetime,” Lewis id. “There’s an awful lot of adjust- ent that takes place when a person gets out into the world of work. Some jobs become obsolete very rapidly and others are formed that we can’t even anticipate today.” The rapid rise and fall in job opportunities is due in part to an on-going economic revolution, Lewis said, which predicated the re cent worldwide recession. “The experts that have looked at the world of work in our society are saying that the recent recession that we just went through, which was a worldwide recession, was really an economic revolution where the world, and the United States in par ticular, was changing from an in dustrial-type society into an infor mation society,” Lewis said. With the changing society in which students live, it is now more important that students make a wise choice of major and career, Lewis said. But he says that the decision making process is not a one-time event but a lifelong process. “If you believe, for example, that there is only one thing that you can do to be happy,” Lewis said, “then you’re going to be in for a lot of frustration.” He said that through out their lives, people often find themselves in a decision-making position and that they need to know how to go about making those deci sions. And that, Lewis said, is what the career development programs of the Student Counseling Service are all about. “Our general philosophy of career development is that it is a process, that people move from one stage to another, that students are not all in the same stage of career development and what they often need is help identifying the stage that they’re in, help in the decision making process, help in identifying alternatives so that they can apply that to the decision-making process and then help in evaluating those alternatives,” Lewis said. He said the Student Counseling Service helps students do all that through three major programs: testing clinics, individual counseling and career motivation workshops. The testing clinics, which are offered two times a week during the summer and three or four times a week during the fall, are basically for students who don’t have a major problem in making a career choice, Lewis said. Either they are satisfied with their major and just want to look around a bit, or they want to make a choice between two or three alternatives or they want to take the test to find out more about them selves, Lewis said. The testing clinics are group ex periences, Lewis said, in which the tests are taken and evaluated in a group. The test given is usually the Strong-Campbell, which tests a stu dent’s interests and compares those interests with people working in va rious careers. However, for those students with a major problem in deciding on a career or major, Lewis recommends individual counseling. See COUNSELING page 8 inside Classified 4 Local 3 Opinions 2 Sports 7 State 4 National 5 forecast Clear to partly cloudv skies todav with a high of 91. Southeasterlv winds of 5 to 10 mph. The low tonight near 70. Partlv cloudv Wednesday with a 20 percent chance of thundershowers and a high of 90.