Regents to fes begin 5-day conference The Texas A&M Board of Re gents will hold a five-day meeting ieginning this afternoon. Among the items to be considered is the fee ssessment for the installment pay- tent of student tuition. The Board will consider the impo sition of a $10 fee for students opt ing to pay their fees in installments. iUso, a $ 10 late fee for each payment | (deadline not met will be discussed. I The installment plan was outlined K>y the Legislature after it passed the union increase bill. The plan re tires universities to allow students p pay their tuition in one, two or our payments. The Board also will consider a >lan that would make an emergency und available to students who are inable to pay their tuition and fees. budget for 1985-86 of a construction ontract will be reviewed by the Board. The Board will meet today and Saturday at a Robertson County Ranch. The remaining meetings will )e held on campus. Sunday’s dis- ussions begin at 3:15 p.m., while Monday and Tuesday’s meetings onvene at 8:30 a.m. SB’S', 1C Madoim Rush a inal, ik- ryper,ik : way ret n secuk iarrisos vfy Swt iaristico: e.” No* dy Swf >rge f or all e forms^ my part •erfot.l> conteit- veafe* oil is ih' tn I Is? Caul >wn styit from st mniand- [tall nd you pla 1 i rrectios journ- for fto r—/ — ■ A proposed bud ind the rewarding Mattox’s plane fills with smoke enroute to Austin Kicking It Around Photo by ANGELA A TKINS Jim Cole practices his field goal kicking skills at Kyle Field Thursday morning. Cole, a transfer stu dent from the University of Texas, is getting ready for this year’s football walk-on tryouts. Cole is from Plano and is planning to major in Business Administration. Unique program aids freshmen 2,600 fish expected to attend camp By D’ANNA HEIDEMAN Reporter Fish Camp isn’t a camp for fish — it’s a camp for new Aggies. It began in 1954 when Gordon Gay, director of YMCA Activities, took a small group of students camp ing in Mexia. Today, Fish Camp is still a Stu dent Y Association project, but it now convenes at Lakeview Method ist Assembly near Palestine. One Texas A&M tradition that dates back to the days when the school was an all-male college, is to call freshman “fish.” “At Fish Camp one has the oppor tunity to not only be infected with the ‘Spirit’ of Aggieland, but also to learn about the various services and agencies of the University that can help smooth the way to a successful academic experience,” writes Dr. Garland E. Bayliss, director of aca demic services. Fish Camp is a unique orientation to help incoming freshman make an easy transition from high school to A&M. Most universities just have a regu lar freshman orientation program that encompasses schedule planning and registration, says Student Y sec retary Janie Metzer. A&M also has such a program. “But Fish Camp is much more,” she says. “It is a lot of fun.” The four-day camp begins when campers meet on campus and head for East Texas on buses. Camp activ ities include informal discussion ses sions with upperclass counselors, in tramural sports activities, dances and evening campfires. Free time also is provided so the freshmen may enjoy two lakes, two swimming pools and other recre ational facilities at Lakeview Meth odist Assembly. Approximately 600 volunteer up perclass counselors help the fresh men learn about the origin and im portance of Aggie traditions, develop study habits, develop lead ership qualities, share their own col lege experiences and get a head start on the fall semester. The 32nd annual Fish Camp ses sions are scheduled for Aug. 13-16, 16-20, 21-24 and 25-28 and cost $65. Close to 2,600 “fish” are expected to attend this year. Associated Press AUSTIN — The cabin of Attor ney General Jim Mattox’s twin-en- ? ;ine airplane lost air pressure and illed with smoke while en route to Austin early Thursday, but the plane landed safely and no one was injured. “It was a frightening experience,” Mattox said. “In light of the other airline disasters that have recently taken place, I must admit I uttered a little prayer.” An aide said it was the second time this year the cabin of the state- owned, 1967 Beechcraft King Air had filled with smoke. The latest incident occurred shortly after midnight as Mattox, an aide and the pilot were returning to Austin from Huntsville. Mattox had been in Huntsville for the scheduled execution of Jay Kelly Pinkerton, who obtained a stay from the U.S. Supreme Court just before mid night. “Five to seven minutes out of Huntsville, the seal around the doors that, in effect, maintains the pressurization of the cabin went out,” Mattox said. There was “a loud, whistling, air- escaping noise around the doors, plus it makes your ears hurt,” he said. Three to four minutes later, Mat- Crashes tox said, “The cabin within a matter of just a couple of seconds filled up with a very dense smoke, smoke that smelled like it was from an electrical fire. “I was sitting about four feet from the pilot, and it was so dense you could just barely see him.” As they readied to make an emer gency landing at Bryan, Mattox said, the pilot shut down some electrical systems. The plane began to descend and as it neared the ground, the pi lot opened cabin windows, clearing out some of the smoke. The plane was able to continue to Austin, landing about 12:45 a.m. “It takes a good while to get an airplane on the ground, and you don’t know how long you’re going to be able to go without oxygen if that’s what it takes,” Mattox said. “My first thought was that we were not going to be able to get the thing on the ground quick enough. I was afraid that the plane was on fire.” Elna Christopher, Mattox’s press secretary, said the same plane caught fire this spring while on a flight to San Antonio. “As we started to land, smoke came out from under the control panel,” said Christopher, who was aboard the plane with Mattox and others of his staff. “It turned out to be a short in the control panel light ing.” Airline mishaps mean big losses for insurers itors or ■ Hurt -opold SinitH Block OsliH' parson . opold savoy Clark never Salley. Jasper *sp¥ r . -M -ilfrtf jaculy i perfc f cfes** per*' 'M' »n, ^ jllft Tel# Police be< At l.ANO’RTI | * Four bicycles were from various locations on pas. ! . •; If: ♦ A wallet was stolen from the a shirt and assorted under were stolen from a earnpus dry twm. ; » Someone stole $80 l Wit register in the -.Health Center,' - •/;. \. • T?-#: • Someone stole $300 from a I wallet in East Kyle. . BURGLARY OF A BUILD- IMG: -f 1 ♦ Someone stole $208 from ter EMPLOYEE OPENING .MAIL: 7., , .7 * # A Texas A&M Mail he was caught from ... DISORDERLY CONDUCT: « A woman reported seeing a man exposing him seif in front of. Fowler Hall. • » ' -C-W I ♦ Someone repotted seeing a man exposing himself in a Har rington Towet elevator. . mf A woman’reported f| | * ’ isses step 5-year sentence for 2 men convicted of slavery upheld Associated Press TYLER — A lawyer for tw r o men convicted of enslaving Mexican workers on an East Texas farm says he will appeal a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling affirming their five-year prison sentences. Steven Crawford, 22, and Randall Waggoner, 23, both of Nacog doches, were convicted in 1983 on 21 counts of slavery, conspiracy and transporting illegal aliens. Tyler lawyer Weldon Holcomb said Wednesday he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the circuit court decision. “We feel the defendants were placed in a position of double jeop ardy,” he said. Crawford and Waggoner were first given five-year probated sen tences by U.S. District Judge William Steger, who called the Mexican workers “wetbacks” during the trial and accused the U.S. Department of Immigration and Naturalization of flooding the Southwest with illegal aliens. “I don’t want to hear anything you have to say,” Steger told Assistant U.S. Attorney Chriselda Ortiz when she tried to reply. “I don’t care what the rules of courtroom procedure are.” The Justice Department appealed Steger’s sentence, claiming he vio lated court rules by refusing to let Ortiz speak. The case was transferred to the court of U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice, who ordered the de fendants to serve five-year prison terms. This week, the appeals court upheld Justice’s sentence and ruled that Steger’s sentencing was illegal. Aliens testified at the trial that they were starved and threatened at gunpoint while planting pine trees on Crawford’s farm near Center. According to testimony, Wag goner, acting under orders from Crawford, packed 19 workers into a U-Haul truck and drove them 400 miles from the border to Crawford’s farm near Center. Federal investigators said the workers were forced to sleep in a 10- by-17-foot shack without beds, run ning water or a toilet. Associated Press NEW YORK — A series of major aircraft crashes this year is bringing heavy losses to the international avi ation insurance business and proba bly higher premiums for airlines, in dustry officials said Thursday. “They’re in big trouble writing airline insurance,” said Sean Moo ney, senior vice president and econ omist at the Insurance Information Institute. The Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 that crashed in Japan on Monday was the third jumbo jet to go down with heavy loss of life in less than two months. The JAL accident killed 520 peo ple, while 133 died 10 days earlier when a Delta Air Lines Lockheed L- 1011 crashed in Dallas, and 329 died when an Air-India 747 crashed into the Atlantic on June 23. At least 376 people died in other commercial aircraft accidents this year, not including one in China and two in the Soviet Union. In 1984, 224 people were killed in 15 accidents involving airplanes be longing to the International Civil Aviation Organization. The Mon treal-based United Nations agency, which has 155 members, said that was the best year in four decades. The impact on insurers of this year’s fatalities, injuries and damage to aircraft is difficult to pin down with accuracy, said Peter O’Grady, president of the Aviation Office of America, an insurance consortium based in Dallas. But in terms of increased premi ums, he said, “I would think that at least 20 percent would be required” by the end of the year. O’Grady estimated that airlines paid $800 million for insurances coverage for planes and injury liabil ity this year. Mooney and O’Grady estimated that coverage of aircraft and equip ment and liability payouts for the three latest major accidents alone would total about $450 million. An estimated $300 million may be needed to pay for the earlier crashes. Thus, O’Grady said, “what we’re looking at is $750 million in just ma jor losses and $800 million in premi ums. So you don’t have any money left to pay for partials.” “Partials” are smaller losses, in cluding such things as lost baggage and partial damage to an aircraft. Also putting pressure on the air lines’ insurance premiums is the state of the large insurance consorti ums. General Accounting Office critical of Navy’s Gulf Coast homeport plan Associated Press WASHINGTON — The General Accounting Office has questioned the Navy’s decision to station dozens of battleships along the Gulf Coast, saying $1 billion could have been saved by locating them in existing ports along the east and west coasts. But Assistant Navy Secretary- Chase Untermeyer said a GAO Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! o 4340 Carter Creek Pkwy * * Suite 107 24 hr. Hotline ▼ briefing paper “does not make any sense at all.” The GAO, which is conducting a full audit of the Navy’s decision, cir- culated a preliminary report to the House and Senate committees on armed services and appropriations. The agency questioned the Navy’s reasoning that the dispersal ot its fleet would make the ships less vul-_ nerable to attack than leaving them clustered in older ports. Navy Secretary John F. Jehman Jr. and Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger announced last month that 29 warships will be scattered- among nine Gulf Coast areas, in-- cluding a battleship, training aircraft carrier, cruiser and destroyer and guided-missile frigates and mine sweepers. ‘T he dispensing of the ships to these ports may not improve survi vability of the 600-ship Navy or pro vide a quicker response time of po tential conflict area,” the briefing, paper stated. The briefing paper also stated iL may cost $ 1 billion to build and out fit new port facilities to take care of the ships to be dispersed in the Gulf. “Existing naval home ports on the East and West coasts have the capac ity to accommodate the 30 ships that are to be assigned to the new ports, without any major expansion or port facilities,” the paper stated. But Untermeyer said, “That is the strangest part of all this. They know that to accommodate a 600-ship Navy, we have to build piers some where. They are not built out of sillv putty.” FREE ALLERGY SCREENING for Children 6-12 years willing to participate in a two-week antihistamine trial. $100 monetary incentive for children chosen to participate. Known allergic children welcome. If you would like to know more call 776-0411 Allergy Associates X-Firm Mat. Sale $79.95 Bedding Liquidation Twin or full sized mattress sets still in factory wrapping. Going fast at $79.95 per set. TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 712 Villa Marla 14 BURRITO SUPREME WITH PURCHASE OF ONE AT REGULAR PRICE. THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1985 Limit one coupon per person per visit: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Not good with any other offer. Valid only at Bryan/College Station Taco Bell®restaurants. 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