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The ins for imita- said he has lesmen “with handise.” a of the toys the puzzle of ransformers. tour the first adults report endlessly be- to make the TexasA&M wk—^ ^ _ « A The Battalion Serving the Gniversity community Vol 79 No. 191 CJSPS 045360 26 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, August 30, 1984 nother ‘There vant all almost ibbage frivtal ) th -1 wrecks, illing one United Press International EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, alif. — An Air Force B-I jet imber, the second of only four (erbuilt, crashed Wednesday in the lojave Desert, killing one crew letnber and injuring two others, of fals said. The Air Force said the unarmed itercontinental jet was on a low-alti- ide, low-speed test flight when it ashed at 10:30 a.in. about 10 miles rrtheast of the sprawling Southern alifornia base. Master Sgt. Wally Ross said all tree crew members were in the jection capsule,” which “success- illy ejected” from the craft before e crash. He said it was not known owthecrew member was killed. A new prototype of the plane lieduled to be introduced next eek, the B-1B, will have individual jection seats instead of the capsule. Airman 1st Class Tom Bernas said ere were no weapons aboard the l “If there were any bombs on it, icy were inert,” Bernas said. “We sn’tdo that sort of thing here. This atest flight facility.” The injured airmen were flown to le hospital at Edwards, the Air orce said. Their conditions were ot immediately available. The names were not released pen- ing notification of relatives. Lt. Col. Alan Sabsevitz said it was efirst crash of a B-1 bomber. “The capsule with three crew lembets ejected upward and par- chuted to Earth,” he said. “A quai led board of officers will be ap- ointed to investigate. Until then, it the cause) is pure conjecture.” Sabsevitz said the plane was the econd B-l bomber ever built and tas being used to study handling haracteristics and avionics for the tew B-IB. He said Wednesday’s test was cheduled to last three hours, 40 ninutes, but the jet crashed a little iveran hour into the flight . It was the 127th test flight of the B-l series, which began in 1974. The Air Force has described the devel opment of the plane, which cost up to $40 million each, as “the most suc cessful bomber test program in his tory.” The crash occurred in a desolate area near the Kern-San Bernardino county line, approximately 80 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles. The explosion sparked several small brush fires. Kern County Fire Capt. David Goodell said “wreckage was strewn all over the place. “The plane looked as though it was destroyed.” The burning jet sent a “large, black column of smoke” into the sky, said San Bernardino fire spokesman Thomas Barnes. The plane was a B-l A version of the bomber that was produced dur ing the Carter administration. It was one of only four built before Presi dent Carter scrubbed the program in 1977 because it was too expensive. President Reagan resurrected the controversial program on Oct. 2, 1981, and ordered production of 100 more jets. Funds await congres sional approval. The B-l, with a 136-foot wing span and a maximum speed of 1,451 mph, was designed to replace the larger B-52, backbone of the Air Force’s strategic bomber fleet since the 1950s. The new prototype, the B-1B bomber, has not yet flown. It is scheduled to roll out of Rockewell’s nearby Palmdale plant next week and President Reagan may be there for the occasion. At the time he gave the go ahead for the B-1B production, Reagan initiated a program to develop a “stealth” bomber to be practically in visible to radar and other detection methods. The B-1B is designed to be in the field by 1988 as a survivable force through the early 1990s. Out with the Old Photo byK YAI\ For the next two weeks Rudder Fountain and it’s acompany- ing mall will be an obstacle course. Workmen will be laboring overhead to add new cross members to the windows on Rud der Tower. University Center Manager Steve Hodges said that the crossmembers were being installed to add support to the new, smaller glass panels also being installed. 2 more inmate stabbinas in TDC United Press International HUNTSVILLE — Two more stabbings reported at the Texas De partment of Corrections pushed the number of stabbings involving in mates this year to 267, including 12 fatal attacks, with 41 stabbings oc- curing this month. TDC spokesman Charles Brown said Wednesday inmate Rickey Lynn Jones, 21, began fighting inmate Marcus Jackson, 21, about 10 p.m. Tuesdtiy in the dayroom of the Clemens Unit in Brazoria County. The fight began with an argument over a radio. Jackson was stabbed seven times in the chest, face and stomach. Dur ing the fight another inmate, Donald Ray Wilson, 19, attempted to help Jackson, grabbed the knife as it hit the floor and stabbed Jones, Brown said. Jones, Wilson and another inmate that entered the brawl are being held in segregation for questioning. Jones was treated at the unit infir mary for multiple lacerations. Jack- son was in critical condition after un dergoing surgery at John Sealy Hospital in Galveston. Nine inmates were killed in at tacks in 1983 but Brown said report ing procedures were more relaxed, so there is no comparable figure for the total number of attacks. One inmate was killed at the Clemens Unit Monday and another died in a stabbing at the Wynne Unit Monday. About 180 inmates at both units remained confined in their cells Wednesday, Brown said. TDC Director Raymond Procu- nier said inmate violence probably will continue until officials can install new techniques, including a reclassi fication of inmates to isolate the most violent ones. Creamery sales room to close doors soon By SARAH OATES Staff Writer opping by the creamery for a flick milkshake between classes may oon become a thing of the past for Host people on campus. Because of declining sales and a poor location,” tcording to animal science faculty, lie creamery sales room will be iosedon Sept. 7. But this doesn’t mean dairy prod- icis produced and sold at the teamery will no longer be available. Hie sales room at the meat lab next loor to the Kleberg Animal and Food Science Center on the west side of campus will continue to sell all creamery products, such as butter, milk and cheese. The meat lab sales room, which opened almost a year ago, offers the products for the same price as the creamery sales room. However, for creamery employ ees, the story isn’t good. Patrons may have to go out of their way to buy its products when the sales room closes, but for the employees, this means Finding a new job. “I came to work yesterday and was told that we were closing and that I would have to go to personnel and see if they could find me another job,” Debbie Matter, a creamery em ployee, said Wednesday. She said employees were surprised to hear the sales room was closing. Matter, who has worked at the Creamery for less than a year, said she “hasn't noticed any drop,” in sales. “We have people standing in line outside by 3 p.m.,” she said. The employees were given two weeks’ notice, which is standard pro cedure at Texas A&M. The 28-year- old Matter said she doesn’t know what she will do if the personnel of fice can’t find her a new job within the University system. “I think it’s really sad that they don’t even try to help us,” she said. Dr. Ronald Richter, an associate professor of animal science who was involved in the decision to close down the sales room, said no one has spoken to him about employee prob lems. Richter said sales at the Creamery declined by 30 percent during the past year. Worn-out facilities, such as the soda fountain, were another factor in the decision. “It would cost about $20,000 to $30,000 to replace the equipment. We just couldn’t justify that when there’s another retail _ outlet on campus,” he said. “‘The Creamery is primarily for teaching and research. The sales room doesn’t contribute to that.” Richter said that since Spence Street was blocked off for construc tion, the Creamery is no longer ac cessible enough to justify keeping it open. “We used to get a lot of families who would come in to buy cheese and butter,” he said, “but we’ve lost that business because traffic and parking are so bad now. There’s bet ter parking at the new place.” James Dooley, business manager for the Animal Science department, said the final decision to close the sales room was made about two weeks ago. He said he discussed the problems with Dr. G.C. Smith, head of the department, and Richter be fore a decision was reached. The Creamery opened in 1956. Firebomb thrown on steps of capitol Injures one, causes no other damage In Today’s Battalion United Press International WASHINGTON — A young man threw a Molotov cocktail on the steps of the Capitol Wednesday, singeing Uourist but causing no other dam- age, police said. Henry David Briody, 20, was ar rested and charged with arson and assault with a deadly weapon, U.S. Capitol police said. Police said his hometown was un known but he was carrying a U.S. passport that listed his birthplace as California. The young man gave no reason for throwing the firebomb when ar rested by police immediately after the incident, a law enforcement spokesman said. The homemade device ignited on the top landing of the center steps on the east side of the Capitol — the main tourist entrance. The incident occurred at about 6:35 a.m. when few tourists or federal workers are at the Capitol. A tourist identified as Steven B. Rock, no age given, of Hull, Mass., received a slight burn on the back of one of his legs from the brief flare of the exploding device, police said. He refused medical treatment. “The Bermuda shorts he was wearing had a slight burn,” a police spokesman said. Police roped off the area on the white granite landing where the bomb ignited, but there was no dam age except for a light brown stain on the stone that was virtually undetec table. A policeman at the scene said the broken glass collected afterward on the landing indicated the man had put gasoline or a similar flammable liquid in a brown beer bottle. The location of the incident is the primary tourist entrance to the huge domed building, which has been ringed with tightened security since a bombing inside the Capitol last fall. But police spokesmen said they did not expect new security measures to result from this latest incident. The Capitol has been the target of bombers three other times. On Nov. 7, a time-bomb left in a second-floor Senate hallway ex ploded, blowing a door off its hinges in the office of Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd and shattering furniture, paintings and woodwork outside the nearby Mansfield Room. No one was hurt, but damage was es timated at$l million. An explosion on March 1, 1971, ripped through a men’s restroom on the ground floor of the Senate wing. No one was hurt, but damage was es timated at $300,000. In July 1915, a Senate reception room on the second floor was dam aged by a bomb, but no one was hurt. The most serious terrorist act in the Capitol came March 1, 1954, when four supporters of Puerto Ri can independence opened fire in the House chamber, wounding five con gressmen. Local • Local Peace Corps looks for increased exposure. See story page 3. • Friday is the last day for cable sign up in the MSC. See story page 4. State • The Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission delays their vote on the development of Matagorda Island. See story page 10. National • Economic indicators dropped in June and July. See story page?.