Nude models being used Central Texas cities trying Mustang's football fate in environmental design class to find solutions to water woes rests on NCAA decision — Page 3 r 1 ' — Page 4 — Page 6 The Battalion Vol. 80 No. 182 QSPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday July 31, 1985 Vandiver to speak at graduation By BRIAN PEARSON Stuff Writer Texas A&M President Frank Van diver will speak at graduation cere monies on Aug. 17. The ceremonies will begin at 9 a.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Also, graduating members of the Corps of Cadets at the ceremony, who will be going into the Army, Navy, Air Force or Marines, will be commissioned as second lieutenants by Lt. Gen Ormond Simpson, vice president for student services. It will be Simpson’s last ceremony to com mission cadets because he is retiring ® on Aug. 31. Simpson said about 21 cadets will be commissioned. Associate Registrar Don Carter ■ said a list of graduation candidates, T both those who are cleared and not ■ cleared for graduation, will be I posted in front of Heaton Hall at 8 I a.m. on Aug. 15. He said students I must clear all academic problems by 15 p.m. on Aug. 15 if they expect to I graduate. “We go to the printing center that I evening and if they’re not in the pro- | gram, they don’t graduate,” Carter 1 said. He said students owing money to 1 various University departments will 1 still be able to graduate, although 1 their transcripts will be blocked. He said students who come in to I clear academic problems after Aug. I 15, even if it’s Friday (Aug. 16), will I be ’S.O.L (Sorry, Out of Luck).” Carter said 1,557 have applied for ■ graduation, and about 100 are ex- | pected to pull out at the last minute. - Photo by TONY S. CASPER Jumping For Joy Texas A&M women’s volleyball coach Terry Condon (center) watches Amy Hamlin (left) and Kelly Bollman execute a blocking drill in G. Rollie White Coliseum during the A&M Volleyball Camp. The camp is being held from July 29 until August 1. White allots money for Corpus homeport Associated Press AUSTIN — Gov. Mark White signed a proclamation Tuesday al lowing $25 million in state money to be spent for the Navy homeport to built at Corpus Christi. Undecided, however, is how Gal veston will come up with the $8 mil lion it needs to land the “consolation prize” offered by the Navy when it picked Corpus Christi as the main site. A Houston lawmaker on hand when White signed the proclamation in private said some of the $25 mil lion might be shifted to Galveston. “We’re working on that right now,” Rep. Ashley Smith said. But a White aide said there’s little chance Galveston would get any of the $25 million. The Navy, after looking at several Gulf Coast cities in a few states, re cently picked Corpus Christi as the homeport for the U.S.S. Wisconsin and its support fleet. Houston-Gal- veston also sought the port, but got what Smith called a “consolation prize” — Five Navy ships. Galveston must come up with $8 million by Aug. 1 or the Navy might look elsewhere. The island city doesn’t have the money and is al ready near its taxing limit. Galveston has a 9.8 percent unemployment rate and needs the 450jobs the ships would bring, according to Mayor Jan Coggeshall. Smith hopes the state’s $25 mil lion can be split. Corpus Christi’s share will be used for dock construc tion, channel dredging and installa tion of electric lines. Texas lawmak ers approved the money this year as art of the state’s pitch for the omeport. The proclamation signed by White certifies that the homeport would mean much for the state economy. Only Corpus Christi is mentioned in the proclamation, but Smith said Galveston needs some of the money. U.S., Japan, Soviet Union will establish radio link Associated Press WASHINGTON — The United States and Japan have agreed with the Soviet Union to establish a radio link to better monitor commercial aircraft crossing the North Pacific, lessening the likelihood of a plane straying into Soviet air space, offi cials announced Tuesday. The measure, aimed at prevent ing a recurrence of the incident in September 1983 when a Korean Air Lines jumbo jet with 269 people aboard penetrated Soviet airspace and was shot down, was tentatively agreed to Monday in Tokyo, the of ficials said. Transportation Secretary Eliza beth Dole, who announced the agreement, called it “an encouraging step toward enhancement of the safety of civil air traffic in the North Pacific region.” The preliminary agreement calls for a special communications net work linking air traffic control cen ters in Tokyo and Anchorage, Alaska, with Soviet air traffic con trollers in Khabarovsk, U.S.S.R. The communication line would be used if civilian airliners flying the northern Pacific route are in diffi culty or off course and heading over restricted Soviet territory, the offi cials said. Neither U.S. nor Japanese air tra ffic controllers are able to track a jet liner on radar along its entire trip across the Pacific. But aviation ex- E erts say Japanese and U.S. control 's in conjunction with Soviet con trollers could monitor an aircraft the entire time. Congressman: War hasn't begun ‘War on Drugs’ takes criticism Associated Press WASHINGTON — The much- heralded “War on Drugs” won’t even begin until the U.S. Customs Service gets its own air fleet, a con gressman whose committee oversees the war told members of the con gressional Border Caucus on Tues day. Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla., said, “We haven’t been beaten in the War on Drugs, quite frankly we haven’t had a War on Drugs.” English, who is chairman of the House Government Operations Sub committee on Government Informa tion, Justice and Agriculture, sug gested the naming of a “drug czar” to coordinate the various federal ef forts aimed at illegal drugs. English said despite Reagan ad ministration support, congressional initiatives have made the real differ ence in the War on Drugs. The cornerstone of the War on Drugs was to be a 1981 amendment to the Posse Comitatus Act to allow military support for civilian drug in terception efforts. He said the National Narcotics Border Interdiction System, which is headed by Vice President George Bush, has done little. He cited a Gov ernment Accounting Office report that found that NNBIS had “no mis sion, no staff, no budget and no au thority.” Customs estimates that 62 percent of illegal drugs entering the country come in by air, English said. Medicare, Medicaid see 20th birthday Associated Press WASHINGTON — Medicare and Medicaid, considered grand social experiments when they were signed into law, marked their 20th birthday Tuesday with Democrats complaining their bright promises have been dimmed by Reagan administra tion ef forts to cap soaring costs. At the same time, the adminis tration said it has strengthened the programs, which are the cor nerstones of federal health pol icy. “We have a great deal more to do to ensure what I think is a test of the society, and that is how it cares for its senior citizens,” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who helped push the original bill through Congress, said at a Capi tol Hill ceremony. “We will not be silent until we guarantee our elderly people the opportunity to live their golden years in peace and security, and free from the fear of devastating medical bills,” Kennedy said. He said new eligibility rules im posed on Medicaid have pushed thousands of poor people off the rolls. And he said Medicare leaves the elderly with the burden of paying for long-term nursing care, eye, foot and dental care, preventive treatment and pre scription drugs. The Reagan administration of ficial who has headed the pro gram for the past four and a half years contended, however, that the administration leaves a valu able legacy to the nation’s elderly at the 20-year mark — a program far broader than the original one, but with controls that can prevent it from collapsing of its own fi nancial weight. Medicare, a health insurance program for the elderly, and Medicaid, the program for the poor, were goals of President John F. Kennedy during his time in the Senate and the White House and became part of Presi dent Lyndon Johnson’s blueprint for a “Great Society.” Over the years. Congress ex panded the program to meet new needs. The disabled were brought into Medicare in 1972, and other services were added later. Costs escalated accordingly. Medicare spending grew from $1 billion in its first year to $71 bil lion — some $8.5 million an hour — this year, Davis said. Expendi tures for Medicaid increased an average of 31 percent a year from 1965 to 1971, and 21 percent a year from 1972 to 1975. The spending has made Medi care and Medicaid the cor nerstones of the entire medical industry, accounting for 27 per cent of all health care expendi tures in the nation, Davis said. Shuttle’s problems due to faulty sensors Associated Press SPACE CENTER, Houston — Faulty sensors, and not an engine failure, probably caused a rocket shutdown that threatened to dump Challenger into the ocean during launch, NASA said Tuesday. The problem — in which sensors indicated fuel pumps were overheat ing when in fact the pumps were op erating normally — is not expected to delay the next shuttle lunch, set for Aug. 24, the space agency said. Computers, taking information from the sensors, ordered one of three main engines to shut down minutes after launch Monday. The action left Challenger, its seven crewmen and a cargo of science in struments in a lower-than-planned orbit and with a shortage of fuel. To add to their problems, the as tronauts discovered Tuesday that a $60 million pointing device that is a key element of four experiments was drifting erratically and was unable to focus the instruments on specific tar gets on the sun. Following standard policy, NA SA’s announcement Tuesday said there will not be another launch un til the Challenger engine problem is -fully understood. The NASA confirmed reports from sources that a study of pres sures and flow patterns “almost con clusively” determined that the launch problems were caused by temperature sensors giving false in formation to computers aboard the $1.2 billion Challenger. The computers, reading the false temperature data, ordered Chal lenger’s engine No. 1 to shutdown 5 minutes, 45 seconds after launch, while the spacecraft was straining to reach orbit. Sensors on another engine also in dicated an extreme temperature rise and threatened to cause another en gine to be turned off. Mission Con trol quickly told the astronauts to disable the sensor readings so the re maining engines would continue to burn. Flight director Cleon Lacefield said that if a second engine had shut down during critical seconds of launch, Challenger would have fallen to Earth. The astronauts had to burn 4,400 pounds of fuel in the Orbital Ma neuvering System rocket system, leaving the spacecraft with about a third less fuel than planned for the science mission. A&M prof says research on animals can benefit people By MICHAEL CRAWFORD Senior Staff Writer During the early morning hours of Dec. 9, 1984, 12 people broke into the City of Hope National Medical Center in Durante, Calif. After entering the labs, they broke into three groups and less than 45 minutes later they left with more than 100 labo ratory animals. That raid was one of about 20 since 1982 carried out by the Animal Liberation Front, a secret organization dedicated to eliminat ing the use of animals for experimentation. Biomedical researchers are concerned that each twist of the key destroys years of de tailed research in these “liberations,” while animal rights’ groups accuse the research community of extreme cruelty. Scientists at the City of Hope facility said they lost more than the dogs, cats, rabbits and rats. The biggest loss, they said, was the research into cancer and emphysema. Texas A&M used more than 31,000 live animals, from white-tailed deer to ham sters, in 1984 experiments. A raid on the University would not only cost research time, but also research funds that; have be come scarce during federal budget cuts. Gary Joiner, director of University Labo ratory Animal Care, says some research would be lost because federal agencies would be reluctant to fund research that was previously started. The storm centers around the animal rights groups’ belief that lower animals, not just humans, have inalienable rights which must be respected. Although Joiner says he understands the sympathies of the groups, he favors the use of animals. “I don’t think we have the right to cause pain or to abuse them,” he says. “But I think it’s wrong to deny people the benefits of help simply because we don’t want to cause pain or discomfort to an animal.” But the Washington D.C.-based People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals insists that most researchers use animals as a mat ter of habit rather than of necessity. Direc tor Ingrid Newkirk says tapes taken from labs by the ALF show researchers abusing unanesthetized animals. In another raid, Newkirk says, dogs were discovered dying of suffocation and living in their own waste. In an interview last week on the Cable News Network program “Newsmaker Sa turday,” Robert Krauss, executive director of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, said some labs may have violated generally accepted standards of animal care. But those labs are excep tions and improvements continue to be made “without the interference of a terror ist organization breaking into labs.” Joiner admits that some questionable practices might have occurred at A&M sev eral years ago, but he insists University guidelines and researcher awareness have eliminated the problem. Still, he says, if the two or three “crank letters” received an nually by the University become more se rious, additional security will be installed. The alternative method of research men tioned most often by animal rights groups is computer modeling of animals’ biological functions. Using this method, proponents claim almost 100 percent of animal use could be eliminated. Critics charge that computer modeling is too new, too complex and too expensive to be used practically. Awareness of the controversy has prompted lawmakers to examine federal guidelines for animal care. Current guidelines require that animals receive ap propriate veterinary care, that they be used only in the advancement of science, and that anesthetic be used if a procedure will cause pain. See Animals, page 4