Wednesday, April 17, 1985AThe Battalion/Page 3 STATE AND LOCAL j hem A&m prof to head EM program hat our scenario] | want to knowisi [)f it.” have Jnited Statesi imericansa it would givetkei ver us. By CHERYL CLARK Reporter The United States’ most complex bomber soon will receive the most pmplex maintenance and repair stem, and a Texas A&M aerospace Pershing mist engineer prof essor will chair the >le in Washing!# White Home nr f'er because ilk] [uest for an i he fact the presiij ean we’ve >f nuclear weal aimed at us. trust the AmereJ dug they are I i the true factisi if Reagan s? Should 1 sari Number One.I pear we belied onger than wej is to improveonil / making a uniat ons. This will« II be certain the! it is that wetiai] an afford to retl il without end Reagan will hml ap and denoui 11 be known in eacemakers an said before ipose he doesn’t s he’s glad to set How long do ; Mother Russa e really are?” ies, ‘Uncle.’" not dual the rest of those ne m ployed, a iellow journ ly. She merely pend money in by traveling to I ? Who knows . about swa t ing back home e to work at McD i real job. ■ople will •rid, and 1 ink I’ll beconten: 1 semesters atTe junior jourtiii taff writer fori program. I Dr. Richard Thomas, director of A&M’s Center for Strategic Tech- ology, also known as the defense think tank, recently was appointed hairman of a joint project between lire U.S. Air Force Logistics Corn- land and and the Air Force’s flight dynamics laboratory at Wright-Pat- terson Air Force Base. Both of these parties are working in conjunction with the North Amer ican Rockwall B-l program to install a computer-aided design program, Thomas said. Although the bombers are similar on the outside, each airplane differs internally, Thomas said. Thus the need for a comprehensive mainte nance and repair program became obvious to North American Rock wall “We are faced with a situation where weapons systems are awfully expensive,” Thomas said. “The weapons systems are more complex and thus fewer vehicles are man ufactured; the readiness of the sys tems must improve, and we must have a rapid turnaround time.” Through a computer-aided de sign (CAD) program which contains the differing features, a B-l bomber will he able to be serviced anywhere in the world, Thomas said. T 1 bomber needs to be repaired, the maintenance crew can call up a di agram of the part on a computer ter minal, Thomas explained. “The computer display can allow the repair crew' to either manufac ture a new part or fix the original one,” Thomas said. “This allows for good old-fashioned American in genuity to still be used if necessary.” Besides getting the bomber back into the air quickly, the program will enable companies to share knowl edge with other companies that manufacture other weapon systems. Thomas said he was chosen chair man because he has no axes to grind between North American Rockwall and Logistics Command. Ffe also was chosen because he had served for six years as a member of the technical advisory group for the Air Force integrated computer-aided manufacturing program. Separated since fall ofSaigon Vietnamese family finally reunited Associated Press I GRAPEVINE — An ugly twist in timing and a decade worth of bu reaucracy kept a Vietnamese family separated, but Phan Minh Hoang pas finally been reunited with his tvife and a 10-year-old daughter he tad never seen. In a tearful meeting at Dallas-Fort »Vorth International Airport Mon- lay night, Phan was reunited with lis wife, Niem Tran Tin, and laughter, Tram Huong. Tram Huong was born the day a ’ban landed in the United States in Il975 for what lie thought would be a jpvo-year stay for schooling in citrus riculture at the University of Flor- a. But because of the fall of Saigon, resultant poor Vietnamese-Ameri- can relations, and later a slow-mov ing bureaucracy, he was unable to return home or bring his wife and daughter to the United States. “Tve been waiting very long,” Phan said. “But I’m sure other peo ple have been waiting longer. “It will take a while to convince myself that they’re really here. It’s like a dream. A very long dream.” Phan, 38, unwillingly left his preg nant wife behind in Vietnam in 1975 after a year of marriage. An em ployee of the South Vietnamese gov ernment, he was to study two years then return to head a government task force on citrus disease. But when Saigon fell a short time later, Phan could not get back and his family could not get out. He said news reports of the chaos in the city fed his fear that his family was hurt or even dead. “For the first few months, I didn’t have any contact,” he said. “I was very, very panicked and very, very depressed,” he said. “Every day I watched the news. It looked like (the) whole (of) Saigon was flattened.” Phan finally learned his family was safe, hut before 1978 no families could legally leave the country, he said. In 1978, a plan to reunite families like Phan’s was established and he began the six years’ worth of paper work to bring his 32-year-old wife and daughter to Texas. Until only a month ago, such a re union was only a fantasy for Phan. “There have been a lot of set backs,” he said. “Every time I con tacted either side, they asked us to provide some other form of paper work. They told my wife she had to do the same. . . . “At one point, in 1980 or ’81, they told her they had lost her file com pletely,” Phan said. In July 1983, Phan’s wife finally got her passport. Last December, her application was approved.Last week, Pahn said, he found out that Monday would be the day. A&M student held by police after he decorated grass By KIRSTEN DIETZ Stuff Writer A Texas A&M student says he was handcuffed and taken to the University Police station for plac ing flowers on the Memorial Stu dent Center grass, hut a police spokesman says the student was brought in for giving the police off icer a false name. Hugh Stearns, a junior history major, said he and two friends were stopped by several Univer sity police of ficers at 4 a.in. Mon day for arranging flowers in die shape of a peace symbol on the MSC grass. He said he and his friends did not construct the symbol to defile the grass memorial, hut to re mind students of its true mean ing. The symbol, Stearns said, was to represent the peace for which the soldiers fought. Stearns said an officer ap proached him, asked questions and then searched and hand cuffed Stearns and took him to the station. “He was quite snotty and wouldn’t answer any of our ques tions,” Stearns said. Stearns said his friends were told to clean up the flowers or Stearns would be put in jail. However, Bob Wiatt, director of security and traffic, said the of ficer approached the MSC area Hugh Stearns and saw a man (Stearns) running. The officer chased Stearns to a car, where two friends were wait ing, Wiatt said. The officer asked Stearns for identification, which he didn’t have, Wiatt said. Stearns gave the officer a false name, and ad mitted his real name only after a check by University Police proved the first name false, Wiatt said. Stearns was handcuffed and brought to the station so his true identity could be established, Wiatt said. He was released after his identity was verified, and no charges were filed against him. Wiatt said the flowers used to construct the peace sign were taken from a dumpster where they had been discarded- ittalion )45 360 tier of Association alism Conference Editorial Board email, Editor Managing Editor y k, News Editor itorial Paee Editor ;r, City Eaitor Sports Editor lion Staff Bullard, Kari Flaeji s n I lallett r Charean Win® en, Leigh in Berry, Kelley SJ Karen Bl(d Karla Marti Tissavoy, Kevin Ini Loren Srf 1 Mike La# DaleSrf Cathy Benin 1 Katherine H® 1 1 Policy self-supportingnctt0 ervice to Texas A&MH e Battalion are those of'■ .and do not necessarily A&M administrators,(fl s a laboratory newsi _ f# and photography (W nmunications. Policy I not exceed 300 worth erves the right to edit ^ take every effort to mV ei must be signed hone number of the titj] d Monday through 0 e/rwsters, except lor ail subscriptions are flM /tool year and $35 pet' p heel on request, lion. 216 Reed McD*); ersity, College Station lumber: (409) 845-26M t College Station, TX W 'rcss changes to The IW College Station, Texas?™ DPS head discredits Lucas] claim of killing only 3 Associated Press AUSTIN — Serial killer Henry Lee Lucas has given police informa tion only the murderer could know in numerous cases, and his claim of killing only three people is “ludi crous,” the head of the Department of Public Safety said Tuesday. “In over 100 cases we know of, he .. took (officers) to the scene of the crime,” Col. Jim Adams said. “And some of these read like a whodunit as far as the detail lie was able to give them.” At various times, Lucas claimed to have committed 100 to 600 killings. Adams said police nationwide cur rently attribute 189 murders to the one-eyed drifter. On Sunday, the Dallas Times Herald quoted Lucas as saying most of his confessions were bogus — a hoax to show up authorities. Lucas told the newspaper he really killed just three people. Asked whether he believed that claim, Adams replied, “No, I don’t.” But a close friend of Lucas says the convicted killer told her he was lying when lie told a Times Herald reporter that he had only killed three people. Clemmie Schroeder said that dur ing a 70-minute visit Sunday af- At various times, Henry Lee Lucas claimed to have committed 100 to 600 killings, said Col. Jim Adams, head of the Department of Public Sa fety. Adams said police nationwide currently attribute 189 murders to the one-eyed drifter. ternoon at the McLennan County Jail in Waco, Lucas told her that he had made the claim about killing only three people 14 months ago be fore his religious convictions deep ened and while he was still denying involvement in other slayings. “I know he’s a killer,” she said. “There’s no doubt in my mind.” Adams said some police agencies may have been too quick tp credit Lucas with killings to “clear” pen ding cases off the books. Adams and Texas Ranger Sgt. Bob Prince, a task force member, said they know of 15 to 20 cases ini tially blamed on Lucas, then re opened later. “There’s no question whatsoever that some of the cases that have been credited to him by those depart ments are not cases that were com mitted by Henry Lee Lucas,” Adams said. During an hour-long news conf er ence, the DPS chief defended the task force his department estab lished to deal with Lucas cases. Adams said the task force never was designed to investigate the slay ings Lucas said he committed in 26 states, hut to make Lucas available to investigators from around the coun try. To date, Lucas has talked to some 1,000 lawmen, Adams said. “It is not an investigating task force,” he said. “It existed ... to make Lucas and information avail able to these law enforcement agen cies.” In many cases, Adams said, Lucas had descriptive information which would not have been available to him from other sources. “The press doesn’t print all the gory details about what he did to some of the vic tims,” he said. VccieAU/AOnema/, ' •: v r - ICR0 CENTER I ,-w# APPLE MACINTOSH DEMOS . lesday, flpn! 1 7 1 -■ Rudder Tower THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY,«>»»> -% A NORMAN JEWISON FILM EIDDIER ON THE ROOF" N pAUl MANN ' ^Sg|j »™,T0P0t NORMA CRANE LEONARD FRHMjMj ■%. Produced and Directed by NORMAN J , SHELDON HARNICK Music for stage play and Mm by JERRY BOCK ROBBINS Produced on the NewYork stage by HAROLD P !n ' 9 h b JEROME ROBBINS m,.^JOHN (LN (llm , din PANAVISION" COTOR Adapted for the screen by IUIVI HuDUl iGl GENERAL AUDIENCES Wednesday, April 17 TiSO P.^ Rudder Theatre M-nU Apple Computer Representative Available IF \y©0 CAM P©il!MT 0 TOU CAiM ,/A ({T* fii] pplcs computer