cap? Isrno stolen in PA stolen arked from utlass d and ring, ►m m center | Monm f A&M professor using rots to test economic theories Page 7 Aggies feast on Hogs 81-67 to end 11-game Arkansas jinx — Page 11 Texas A&M m m «• The Battalion Vd. 83 Mo. 87 USPS 075360 14 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, January 30, 1986 BITA. | OTOF oast Guard pulls metal, tiles from ocean id two from i in PA irbure 2 VW nto th? mined d. “Aft eetings^ arch pr ed peop someoi llor Ha: the dead d that ht a core id its sit Associated Press ;APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last Guard pulled (iOO pounds of Jtal and tiles from Challenger out the Atlantic Ocean Wednesday, 1 expeits impounded every bit of a for clues to the death of seven pie in the world’s worst space di eter. ■NASA said the five men and two llinen aboard the 100-ton shuttle jnpbably had no warning of the im- "iding explosion. The debris col- ted by Wednesday afternoon did bo' include any clothing or personal Tectsof the astronauts. Ja cone-shaped object, possibly |>m the nose of one of the shuttle’s id rocket boosters, was spotted, t it was too big to put aboard the M ill cutter ship Dallas. A buoy ten- ■r was sent to the area. ■The largest piece of debris found after a full day ol searching was 15 ■t by 15 feet. Other pieces were 12 |‘t long and 10 feet long. Most Reagan to attend Houston memorial service Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan will fly to the Johnson Space Center in Houston Friday to lead the nation in a tribute to the seven Challenger astronauts killed in the worst accident in the history of space exploration, it was announced Wednesday. Accompanied by his wife, Nancy, Reagan will attend mid day memorial services in the com munity that was home to all of the crew members except school- _ teacher Christa McAuliffe of Concord, N.H., and mission spe cialist Judith A. Resnick of Cleve land, Ohio. The president sent a written message of condolence to stu dents and staff at Concord High School, where McAuliffe has taught history since 1982. The White House said contents of the message would not be released until the children returned to school Thursday. As the American flag flew at half-staff over the White House, Reagan telephoned McAuliffe’s husband Steven and extended condolences to him, his son Scott, 9, and daughter Caroline, 6. Reagan also talked by tele phone with relatives of the other six crew members. He spoke with June Scobee, wife of mission com mander Francis R. Scobee; Mar vin Resnik, father of the only other female member of the crew; Marcia Jarvis, wife of pay- load specialist Gregory Jarvis; Jane Smith, wife of pilot Michael Smith; Cheryl McNair, wife of mission specialist Ronald McNair; and Claude Onizuka, brother of mission specialist Ellison Oni zuka. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said Vice President George Bush reported to Reagan on his trip to Cape Canaveral to meet with families of the victims, relaying the request of June Sco bee, wife of shuttle pilot Francis R. Scobee, to “please do not let this stop the shuttle program.” See President, page 14 nario you can possibly imagine,” he said. “There was nothing anyone could have done for this one. It just stopped.” He described the mood in the control room as “extremely profes sional under the circumstances, very somber, there was not much said.” When computer screens showed no more data was coming in, he said, engineers watched the views from television cameras. “We were hoping something bet ter would come out of it,” he said. After a while, we resumed gathering data, put it all up and called it a day.” See NAS A,page 14 were of aluminum, some containing piping, others covered with tiles. More helicopters will be used to day to see if a large object could be seen in shallow areas. Sonar equip ment was to be added later. Experts were studying computer readouts that timed events at one- thousandths of a second, hoping to learn if the problem could have been a rupture of the shuttle’s huge exter nal tank. Much speculation has fo cused on the tank as the source of the explosion. Flight director Jay Greene said data from the tank is not read in Mission Control, but that it is re corded and will be available for the analysis of the tragedy. “The (external tank) data would be a useful thing to have now, but it’s not an operational requirement to have it (during launch),” he said. “There is a lot of recorded data sent down that we haven’t looked at yet.” Mission Control, with all its so phisticated technology, had no warning of the impending explo sion, said Greene, who was directing Challenger’s climb to space. “We train awfully hard for these flights and we train under every sce- Also see: • Unmanned flights, page 4 • Satellite owners, page! • America mourns, page 9 • McAuliffe’s peers grieve, page 9 • 12-year-old Resnik, page 9 • NASA guards families, page 9 0 21 die in plane crash near port in Mexico Free As A Bird Birds fly by the sun en route to their night roosts Wednesday. This was taken from a field near Beef Cattle Road. Associated Press LOS MOCHIS, Mexico — An AeroCalifornia airliner DC-3 carry ing 21 people crashed Wednesday on a hill near the fog-covered air port of this Pacific port, and an air line spokeswoman said all aboard were killed. “There were no survivors,” said Mara Castellon, spokeswoman for the airline’s main office in La Paz on the Baja California peninsula. She said the two-engine propeller plane was flying from Ciudad Con- stitucion on Baja California to Los Mochis, carrying 18 passengers and three crew members. Ernesto Zavala Valdes, the spokesman for AeroCalifornia in Los Mochis, said all aboard were Mexican citizens. He said the plane crashed because “of lack of visibility.” Associated Press reporter Cam Rossie, who was flying above the Los Mochis airport in a six-seater Cessna at the time of the crash at about 10:15 a.m. EST, saw the accident. “It burst into flames, and from the air you could see the tail section was separated,” she said in a telephone interview. “And it looked like the plane was totally destroyed,” she added. “We were approaching,” Rossie said. “Our pilot said we were not going to land in Los Mochis because of fog and the airport was closed,” she said.“Then he changed his mind and said we would go ahead and go to Los Mochis and see what it looks like. “We were in the air, and this DC-3 was in the air. “He said we’ll wait and see if it lands, see how it does. “It (the AeroCalifornia plane) made an attempt at the landing strip, partially covered with fog. “We were circling the hill by the airstrip, and the DC-3 plane couldn’t land on its first attempt and so it came back around and it started to climb over the hill. “Its wing went down and it crashed on the side of the hill.” A man answering the telephone at the AeroCalifornia office in Los Mo chis said there were 18 passengers and three crew members aboard. Travel information guides in Mexico City list AeroCalifornia as a regional airline. It is based in La Paz on the Baja California peninsula, directly across the Gulf of California from Los Mo chis. S Council approves change Cable rates to increase Feb. 1 By CRAIG RENFRO Staff Writer jThe College Station City Council ■ednesday night unanimously ap proved an ordinance which will al- ■w McCaw Cablevision to increase Jble service rates effective Feb. 1. 1 Under the ordinance, the cable ptes for the 30-channel package will ■crease from $12.50 per month to SI 5, Bjoseph DiBacco, regional vice ptisident for McCaw, said increased Rpenditures in operations, in- leased programming and copyright Bsts, and the need for additional ppital to make cable service im- jjiovements are reasons for the in crease. I The franchise agreement McCaw as with the city states that the cable impany must notify the city 30 days i advance of a rate increase. After Notified, the city can do nothing, and It the company set the rate, or the Hty can set a rate that allows McCaw | reasonable rate of return can their r vestment. McCaw notified the city of its plan ~fl) increase the rates on Oct. 31. Both liege Station and Bryan sus- ^nded the rate increase and hired ck Hopper, a rate consultant from ustin, to’ analyze the proposed ike. Hopper’s report made no specific From left to right, Mayor Gary Halter, Council Members James Bond and Fred Brown, and Photo by RANDY MERRILL Texas A&M Student Government representative Mike Hachtman at the City Council meeting. recommendations but stated McCaw is entitled to an increase — though not the full amount requested. The report also said the company may need increased revenues to bring its performance to long-run expecta tions. To determine if McCaw’s request was justifiable, the city manager of fices of B-CS constructed a rate of return analysis, which said McCaw ran an efficient operation and said McCaw was entitled to the full in- According to the analysis, cable industry indicators said McCaw maintained a desirable level of oper ating expenses but was not receiving a fair rate of return on investment. William Cole, College Station city manager, said both cities worked ex tensively on the analysis. “McCaw must be in the business for the long-haul,” Cole said. “Be cause if they are operating in the short-run, they are in for a loss, but in later years their rate of return will be very good.” Texaco loses bid to remove judge who upheld order Associated Press HOUSTON — Texaco Inc. has lost its bid to remove a Texas judge who ordered the nation’s third-largest oil company to pay a record $11.1 billion for its role in thwarting Pennzoil Co.’s merger with Getty Oil Co. Second Administrative Judge Thomas Stovall Jr. said Wednes day he rejected Texaco’s request to disqualify State District Judge Solomon Casseb Jr., who pre sided over the last eight weeks of the 4'/2-month trial. “I see no need for further hearings on this matter,” said Sto vall, adding that Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice John Hill signed a certificate of Casseb’s re tirement in May. Stovall appointed Casseb to the case in October after the original trial judge, Anthony Farris, be came ill. Texaco spokeswoman Anita Larson in White Plains, N.Y., said the company had no comment on Stovall’s ruling. Pennzoil spokes man Bob Harper also declined to comment. In its motion for a new trial. Texaco alleged Casseb was not le gally qualified to serve as a “re tired judge” because he had not served enough time on the bench to qulaify for state retirement benefits. Upon resuming work as a re tired judge, Casseb failed to take the oath of office, Texaco ar gued. A hearing on the request for a new trial has not been set by Cas seb. o pi 19£ January 1984 for $10.1 billion, the second largest merger in U.S. corporate history. But a state district court jury in Houston ruled in November that Texaco should pay Pennzoil $10.53 billion in damages for wrongfully interfering in a pre vious Pennzoil-Getty Oil merger. Casseb upheld the damage award — the largest in U.S. his tory — and added $600 million in interest. Texas law requires that Texaco post a bond of $12 billion — the amount plus interest and court costs — before it can appeal.