>e ns Women playing more active role now in A&M Corps of Cadets — Page 3 Poll says Americans favor use of bounty in capturing terrorists — Page 5 Ueberroth asks for baseball talks to resume on strike deadline day — Page 6 ence msin !1 increase nprovenitu 1 control! pace Cem sion scieiii svlielmed" Irered by tiger's carj g device is esigned (« d expert software Texas A&M The Battalion Serving the University community : Vol. 80 Mo. 185 GSPS 045360 6 pages nting devj opticitl m still fi College Station, Texas Tuesday August 6, 1985 ctivists on trial for treason in South Africa tality of iJ rd as we eJ ie said Kid inforraatJ escope, tie )le to accd e sun. um came!! for the fttil rban said; ' about tk irs. CENTER' 1 260-91M Associated Press PIETERMARITZBURG, South A-frica — The treason trial of 16 anti-apartheid activists began Mon- dav and black miners announced an impending boycott of white busi- i|sses to protest the state of emer gency. ■ Police reported 16 more arrests under the emergency imposed last month in an attempt to quell the tide ■ riot and protest that has swept Hardware io blame for backup at Pavilion By KAREN BLOCH Staff Writer 1 Building a better mousetrap is not always easy. I Texas A&M students learned this Hie hard way when the Student In- | formation Management System I (SIMS) was put to its first real test [ Monday at open registration. | Students attempting to register or drop-add were greeted at the Pavil ion by long lines. Don Carter, asso ciate registrar, said the lines can be attributed to the fact that more stu dents showed up for open registra- ! Bon than had been expected and s that there were several problems with the system’s printer. “We stress-tested the system,” arter said, “but there’s no way we m predict that we’ll have a problem like this.” Also, SIMS has been used to register some of the incoming freshman. With SIMS, students register at mputer terminals and know im- ediately if the class is available, ♦i Students also receive copies of their jHhedules and may pay their fees be- Jervice fore leaving the building. I However, a problem with the Jjprinters caused long lines Monday. Steve Williams, assistant director ;™ ) p flofthe SIMS project, said that there • A i>*t>B ave ^ een no problems wirh the ac- Hal program, only with the hard- black cities and townships for nearly a year, claiming 500 black victims. The trial of 16 leaders of the United Democratic Front, in this city of eastern Natal province, is seen as the most significant treason case in South Africa since 156 activists were acquitted after a four-year-long legal contest that began in 1956. Charges in this case range from praising Nelson Mandela, jailed leader of the outlawed African Na tional Congress, to making speeches that further the aims of what the government calls the “revolutionary alliance.” The United Democratic Front is the main group fighting apartheid, the institutionalized race segregation through which South Africa’s 5 mil lion whites control the voteless black majority of 24 million. Defendants include two of the group’s three co- presidents. National police headquarters in Pretoria said the new detentions brought the total arrests to 1,428 since the emergency took effect July 21, and 109 have been released. Most of those detained are in the second and third rank? of the UDF and its 600 affiliate organizations. In Johannesburg, the black Na tional Union of Mineworkers said it was preparing a boycott of white- owned businesses to protest the emergency. The same union an nounced Sunday it will call a gold mine strike Aug. 25 that could cripple the gold-dependent econ omy. A three-day day period during which President P.W. Botha can avert the boycott by liftng the emer gency probably will be set to start Tuesday, union spokeswoman Ma- noko Nchwe said. At the treason trial in a heavily guarded red brick courthouse in Pie termaritzburg, defense lawyers de scribed the indictment as unfounded and began a procedural battle. They contended that the indictment, cov ering alleged offenses over the past four years, was too sweeping and vague. The 16 defendants stood with heads bowed for a minute in mem ory of Nonyamezeleo Mxenge, trial lawyer for two of the accused, who was killed by gunmen last Thursday. She was the fifth senior member of the United Democratic Front slain in mysterious circumstances in recent weeks. ■ * • •**■> RM ).95 on solid la, chair, Dies. Re- r lowest )UTLET Sale ition ess sets Going )UTLET Delta jet hit ground before warning issued Photo by LORI CHANEY Students wait in line during open registration Monday morning. 0 L )Y recent iscle or r taking ition Inc. Today, 18 more terminals will be added in the Pavilion, bring the total ■number of terminals to 36. This should speed up the registration process. Carter said. Williams said that since the system problems were with the printer, no schedules were lost. Carter said that the problems seem to have been solved and regis tration will be held tomorrow as planned, from 10 a.m. to noon and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Open registration and drop-add continues through August 23. Students who were eligible for preregistration in the spring, but did not register, may register during open registration. Those who did not attend A&M during the spring semester, but have attended the Uni versity before, and students who were blocked for preregistration by their academic departments should contact their departments to see if they will be allowed to register. Carter warned that some aca demic departments will not have ad visers availabe to register students at all times. So, students coming to campus to register or drop-add must call their departments ahead of time. Associated Press GRAPEVINE — Delta Air Lines Flight 191 already was breaking up when air traffic controllers franti cally warned the pilot to abort his landing, federal investigators said Monday. The voice recorder of the L-1011 jumbo jet, which killed 133 people in Friday’s crash, picked up sounds of the airplane coming apart, “sort of a crackling, grinding” sound, said Na tional Transportation Safety Board member Patrick Bursley. Over the sound of the breakup could be heard the frantic order of the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport flight controller, “Delta, go around!” urging the pilot not to land, said Bursley. An automatic device in the cockpit also told the pilot in its electronic voice, “Pull up! Pull up! Pull up!” just before the crash, he said. Bursley also said the flight data recorder revealed some speed fluc tuations before the crash, which he said must be analyzed further. Bursley for the first time fixed the exact time of the crash as 6:08 p.m. CDT, based on the observation of a person at the airport who was setting aircraft clocks aboard an airplane and witnessed the crash. Investigators earlier said the jumbo jet might already have hit the ground by the time the controller in the tower was able to issue the com mand to “go around.” Tape recordings made in the tower show that just before the crash an air traffic controller watched as the plane emerged from a thun dershower 50 to 100 feet above the ground, authorities said. The plane at that point may have been bounc ing after initial impact, investigators said. “Delta, go around!” the controller ordered, but Bursley said Monday it was unclear whether the pilot heard. He said he did not know whether the pilot heard the order or tried to respond, but that plane’s digital flight recorder indicated a surge in engine power just before the crash. “Power is an answer in overcom ing problems in flight control,” Bur sley said. But he said investigators who listened to the voice recorder detected no alarm by the cockpit crew. Rudy Kapustin, head of the NTSB’s investigative team, said his agency probably would be at the crash site for at least a week. Bursley said officials are investi gating the role of wind shear — an abrupt change of wind direction and speed — in the crash. Instruments at the airport showed low-level wind shear in the area minutes after the crash, but might have missed wind shear farther away, he said. Since wind shear was registered 10 minutes after the crash, Bursley said it was reasonable it could have occurred during the crash. IS exes * * ). ig ED, ION, l *“'" r f *: eople ' ’ IN UION ion! l,i 0W( lion displor >* 5 . ificiffl! Io buiintii 1 5-2611 Reagan says skin taken from nose was cancerous Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan revealed Monday that tis sue removed from his nose last week was a sun-induced skin can cer, the most common and easily curable form of the disease. Reagan said no further treat ment was necessary. The tissue on Reagan’s nose was removed by a dermatologist at the White House last Tuesday. The White House did not reveal the procedure until two days later and then refused to say whether it had been biopsied or whether it was cancerous. Dr. T homas Nigra, chief of the Dermatology Department at Washington Hospital Center and a recognized expert in his field, said there was no relationship be tween the skin cancer and the ma lignant tumor removed from Reagan’s colon July 13. While describing skin cancer as the most common and curable form of the disease. Nigra said the existence of the disease “puts you at risk” in the future. Statisti cally, one in seven people who have had skin cancer will get it again within a year and a half, Ni gra said. Reagan revealed the existence of skin cancer as he answered questions at his first news confer ence since his surgery. In other areas, Reagan said: • The United States would agree to a nuclear test ban mora torium at some undetermined time in the future, but only if the Soviet Union refrained from fur ther testing and allowed the United States to complete testing for its weapons programs. • The United States will stick with its policy of quiet diplomacy — also known as “constructive en gagement” — toward South Af rica although the administration opposes the state of emergency imposed by the white-ruled gov ernment in Pretoria. • The budget compromise ap proved by Congress last week “was not as much as we had hoped” for in the way of savings. He promised to examine future spending bills from Congress “with my veto pen hovering over every line.” The budget calls for $967.6 billion in spending in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 and projects $55.5 billion in savings during the year. • He will “pull out all the stops” for passage of a tax-over- haul plan after Labor Day, and also will call on Congress for a constitutional balanced-budget amendment and for authoriza tion to veto individual items in spending legislation. 3 percent below national average A&M students’ GSL default rate low By JERRY OSLIN Staff Writer Texas A&M students are doing a better job of paying back their feder ally sponsored Guaranteed Student Loans than other students in the state and the country, says Tom Me- lecki, a spokesman for the Texas Guaranteed Student Loan Corpora tion. Nationally, the GSL default rate is 4.4 percent, for the state, 3.2 per cent, and for A&M, 1.29 percent, Melecki says. The TGSLC, a public, nonprofit organization established by the Texas Legislature in 1979 to handle GSL’s in Texas, regularly reports on the default rates in the state. Melecki attributed A&M’s and the state’s low default rates to Texas’ strong economy and the willingness of its students to pay back their loans. “The healthy economy in Texas does a lot to keep the default rate down,” he says, “and students in Texas have it in their minds that they are going to pay back their loans when they borrow.” A1 Bormann, assistant director of student financial aid at A&M, says the national and state GSL default rate is getting better but the default rate for A&M has always been low. “The responsibility of the individ ual is much better today than it was in the past,” Bormann says, “but I don’t think we’ll see much change here at A&M because we basically have a conservative student body that always did take care of their re sponsibilities.” Students are expected to start paying back their loans five months after they graduate, he says. Bormann says the default rate on all educational loans to A&M stu dents over the past 20 years has been about 3 percent while the national default rate has been as high as 18 percent during the same period. He says college students across the nation have been doing a better job of repaying their loans because of better loan counseling by adminis trators. “Students in the past sometimes did not know if they were receiving gift aid or loan aid,” Bormann says. “Communication between adminis trators of the loan program and stu dent borrowers was that bad.” Bormann also attributes the im proved default rate to better collec tion efforts. “Sometimes in the past students felt that the government wouldn’t do anything to them,” he says. “They felt they would be lost in the num bers, but they are quickly finding out that the government has ways to track down people.” A GSL is financed by a bank, sav ings and loan or some other finan-' cial institution, Bormann says. But in case of default, the federal govern ment assumes responsibility for the loan and will try to collect from the borrower, he says. “The state of Texas will stop a state employee’s payroll check if he defaults on a GSL,” Bormann says, “and the federal government will stop a federal employee’s paycheck also.” He says the crackdown on de faulted GSL’s is a result of federal budget-reducing policies. A-bomb dropped 40 years ago today Associated Press Peace activists around the world are marking the 40th anniversary Tuesday of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima with rallies, speeches, churchbells tolling the grim hour and shadows painted on sidewalks to recall those vaporized in the flash of light and heat. In Hiroshima, tens of thousands of religious pilgrims, dignitaries and survivors stood silently today in Peace Park, which encompasses “ground zero,” at 8:15 a.m., the time the bomb struck that Japanese city. School children in San Francisco will display hundreds of paper cranes — symbols of peace — while residents of West Virginia will set lighted paper lanterns afloat in the Kanawha River. Demonstrations also are scheduled at nuclear weap ons and research facilities. Louisiana residents readied a gi ant ribbon made of flags and pic tures to be tied around the gover nor’s mansion, a reprise of a weekend demonstration in Washing ton, D.C. An eight-day “festival of life” be gan Sunday near the Rocky Flats nu clear weapons plant in Colorado. Some 4,000 people gathered Sun day at a riverfront park in Nashville, Tenn., for a peace rally that in cluded music by country singer Roseanne Cash and a speech by a survivor of the Hiroshima bombing, which occurred at 8:15 a.m. Aug. 6, 1945. “The terrible atomic and hydro gen bombs should never be dropped on the Earth again,” Hiroshi Miwa told the crowd. “We should raise our voice for a total ban of nuclear weap ons, louder than ever. We hope that this year will be a year of a decisive turn.” Estimates of those w ho died in Hi roshima from the bomb called .“Little Boy” range up 140,000. Three days later, on Aug. 9, 1945, an estimated 70,000 people were See Bomb, page 5