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Jesse Jackson goes to Cuba on tour Swimmers breaking records at Olympic trials See page 4 See page 11 Senator awarded Medal of Freedom See page 4 TW e ^ &M D 1 tie tsattalion Serving the University community Vol. 79 Mo. 164 USPS 0453690 12 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, June 27, 1984 but ional made ii it Chryslti xas andi i states, tk embld n plant jus •pokesim' re made: ie engine wrt 5,0111 per monl LipplemeE ed autos* ■d as Men- ice stkke :l. i mainh f gil with trant ricio Vait in and tk daughlfl is given i on for tie se agains a govern’ trial, mi s, the Bot Sanctuan a Vietnaii Oscar Ro’ iree illegal station. ►rn officials, he town's 1982, dial iccifted 1)| : included ;d agaiik irs tobeli efused w hey could y could al strictions. tier of la* y prohik :xpressioi ” assistan' Ubis saii bsequendf the morf 0 feet ^ tre centei 1 rvingalce ii beer anl 11 be alio*; hey want ve to k't Id contrJ fficialsantl ied despiK ral defea 11 tenacity k ened W® 1 ,d Variei' Shuttle launch aborted United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — An I engine failure forced a dramatic I launch abort seconds before blastoff I of the space shuttle Discovery Tues- I day. A fire broke out and the shuttle commander said the crew was ready to “bail out” if it had not been extin guished. [ But the astronauts did not have to use escape gondolas attached to long slide wires at the top of the launch tower to reach safety. Instead, they spent an anxious 38 minutes in Dis covery’s cabin while ground crews I quickly defused the situation. “We were all disappointed, but the crew’s reaction was at all times purely professional and needless to say, we look forward to a successful mission later on,” said shuttle com mander Henry Hartsfield. Discovery’s maiden flight was de- j layed indefinitely by the launch fail ure. Glynn Lunney, shuttle program ; manager at the Johnson Space Cen- j ter in Houston, said he “anticipated” the delay caused by the engine fail ure would be a minimum of 10 days to two weeks. “After the 31-second point in the | launch count, I thought that we were on our way,” Hartsfield said in a j statement released by NASA. “We had the normal big kick when the engines ignite and almost simulta- ; neously we had the engine alarm. “It was then that I knew that we were not going anywhere and my major concern was that the solids did not fire,” Hartsfield said, referring to the shuttle’s twin booster rockets I that are not ignited until all three | main engines reach full power. The launch sequence was stopped just four seconds before solid rocket ignition, which would have com mitted the shuttle to blastoff. In stead the spaceship remained firmly | bolted to the launch pad. A nearly invisible hydrogen fire flamed briefly at the base of Discov ery moments after a failure in the No. 3 main engine had prompted | the shuttle’s master computer to stop the launch sequence. An inspection team was schedule to assemble at the oceanside launch pad at 8 a.m. Wednesday to find out the extent of the damage caused by the fire and the water spray on deli cate systems. [ Discovery is scheduled to blast off Aug. 29 on its second mission, but i that date will inevitably slip as the in- | vestigation into the launch failure proceeds. Ag college enrollment declines By KARI FLUEGEL Staff Writer The number of agriculture scien tists retiring and other factors could result a serious shortage of agricul tural scientists within the next ten years, Dr. H.O. Kunkel, dean of the college of Agriculture, said while speaking at Govenors’ Conference on Agriculture. An estimated 15,000 doctorate degrees will be granted in agricul ture during the next decade, or about 1,500 a year, Kunkel said, but that may not be enough to fill the positions of retiring scientists. “These raw numbers, on the sur face, suggest the needs will be met,” Kunkel said. Because the United States is a ma jor training ground for third world agricultural scientists, almost 40 per cent of the students studying agri culture in the United States are non immigrant foriegn students, 90 per cent of which will find employment in other countries upon graduation. “This of course is an essential, vi- Learning New Steps Photo by PETER ROCHA The Vidor High School Brigadettes concentrate on a new American Drill Team School on campus this week. See page 5 dance routine in East Kyle. The group is participating in the for related photos. Education accord reached Senate votes for penalty United Press International WASHINGTON — Spurred by pleas to save hundreds of young lives per year, the Senate voted Tuesday to restrict federal highway construction funds for states that do not enact a 2Tyear-old drinking age within two years. The measure was adopted over the protests of conservatives, who said it would curb states’ rights and discriminate against young drivers. But backers argued it would stem highway deaths, especially those of young people who drive over “blood borders” to neighboring states to drink. The drinking age provision, which passed 81-16, would cut fed eral highway construction funds 5 percent in fiscal 1987, which begins Oct. 1, 1986, and 10 percent in fiscal 1988 for states that do not raise their drinking ages to 21. It was an amendment to a child safety bill. Offered by Sen. Frank Uauten- berg, D-N.J., it also would add 5 per cent to highway safety grants for states imposing mandatory jail terms and license revocation for drunk driving offenses. The House adopted a drinking age amendment to a different bill June 7 — and not including the mandatory sentencing provisions — so another House vote will be needed. President Reagan endorsed the concept June 13. United Press International AUSTIN — A House-Senate con ference committee reached accords Tuesday on the state school board and teacher competency tests, leav ing the complex issue of school fi nancing as the only remaining area of discord in two versions of an edu cation reform bill. The 10-member committee, in a more conciliatory mood Tuesday af ter a late night session Monday erupted into name-calling and obscenities, enters its fourth day of negotiations Wednesday in hopes of resolving the school financing issue. Once the two houses accept the conference committee’s compromise bill, it then can be sent to Gov. Mark White for his signature. Despite strong opposition earlier by Senate members, conferees adopted the House bill’s plan to re quire all teachers to pass a compe tency test by June 1986 in order to ‘Pro-family’ groups protest education reform bill United Press International AUSTIN — A coalition of “pro-family” groups Tuesday protested the education reform bill being considered by the Texas Legislature, saying it assumes par ents don’t know what’s best for their children. “Some of these people seem to have the idea that the parents of Texas don’t know what they’re doing and they’re not qualified to educate their children and rear their children,” said spokesman Buddy Hicks of Austin. About 100 demonstrators, some carrying placards, gathered on the state Capitol steps to ex press their displeasure with the retain their jobs. The Senate bill made competency testing optional for local school districts. Conferees also compromised on a career ladder plan that would give additional pay bonuses to teachers who complete certain performance and educational requirements. For advancement from level one to level two of the ladder, teachers would earn between $1,500 and $2,000 a year; from two to three, $3,000 to $4,000; and from three to four, $4,500 to $6,000. School dis tricts must award the maximum amounts to teachers unless the state fails to fund career ladder bonuses. Disagreements stemming from the disputed issues prompted an an gry outburst Monday from Sen. Carl Parker, chairman of the Senate Edu cation Committee. Parker, D-Port Arthur, uttered obscenities and threatened to walk out of the meeting. Other areas of conflict in the two bills that were resolved by the con ference committee included: • Pre-kindergarten for poor or non-English-speaking 4-year-olds in school districts where at least 15 eli gible students wish to attend. • Passage of a basic skills test for high school graduation. • Phase-in of a plan to lower tea cher-pupil ratios in elementary grades to 1:22. • Requiring students to maintain passing grades in all academic sub jects in order to participate in extra curricular activities. Before adopting the Lautenberg provision, the Senate defeated, 65- 32, a rival approach offered by con servative members to add 5 percent to a state’s highway safety money for enacting a 21-year-old age drinking law, 5 percent more for mandatory sentencing and 1 percent more for every 1 percent decrease in alcohol- related deaths. Twenty-three states now have 21- year-old drinking laws, including four that approved them this year. Lautenberg said his punishment approach is the most effective way to end a “crazy quilt of drinking ages in neighboring states.” The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates 1,250 lives a year would be saved by a higher drinking age, Lautenberg said. Half the nation’s teenage high way deaths are caused by drunk driving, he said, and teenagers are involved in 21 percent of alcohol-re lated highway deaths. Dr. H.O. Kunkel tal contribution of U.S. higher edu cation to the welfare of people throughout the world,” Kunkel said. “But it also suggests that not enough U.S. citizens have gone into grad uate studies in agriculture.” About 27 percent of the current faculty members in agriculture will have reached 65 by 1994 and an esti mated 90 percent will retire within the decade. “Assuming a two percent annual attrition for other reasons, 3,000, or nearly one-third, of the available Ph.D. supply will be required for See KUNKEL page 3 New Hilton started By KARI FLUEGEL Staff Writer Construction began about a month ago on a new hotel and con ference center in College Station. The Hilton Hotel and Conference Center, costing an estimated $17.8 million dollars, is scheduled to open May 23, 1985. Located at the corner of Univer sity and Fedmart, the basement of the complex already has been dug and workers are pouring cement, Ron Jackson, president of Sunbelt Hotels Inc. and one of the owners of the Hilton, said. The strange looking t-shaped crane which can be seen from the Texas A&M campus will run up the front of the building. Later, it will aid in construction as an elevator shaft to get equipment up to work ers, Jackson said. The new complex is being built in this area because of the expected growth in the Bryan—College Sta tion area over the next five years, Jackson said. Future university activities and expected growth of industry in the area influenced the decision to build the hotel, Jackson said. Construction on the new Hil ton continues. “We just think the market is ready for a high quality facility,” Jackson said. “We’ll have the finest facilities in the area.” The 11-story building will have 302 rooms, eight suites, seven Jacuzzi suites, an outdoor pool and a lobby bar. Other facilities at the Hilton will include a 130-person capacity sea food restaurant, a 120-person Tex- mex restaurant called the Plaza Cafe and a 300-seat Las Vegas-type bar named Sundance with live club acts. The hotel also will have a 1,200- person capacity ballroom, an ampi- theater with projection equipment and ten other meeting rooms. WKm Local ©day’s Battalion • The Family Tree is a halfway house for men at least 18 years old suffering from mental retardation. See story page 3. State • Mexican businessmen are complaining about U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service officers at the San Antonio airport. See story page 6. National • Democratic rivals Walter Mondale and Gary Hart made peace Tuesday. See story page 4. World • Iran accused Iraq of shelling three of its towns in a new violation of a U.N.-mediated cease-fire protecting bor der cities. See story page 6.