MSC president says people important to union's success I — Page 5 — Aggie netters coast to wins in home-opening matches Page 12 Vol. 83 No. 89 GSPS 075360 14 pages College Station, Texas Monday, February 3, 1986 E ^oiisin’ For Daytona :: j: [Contestants compete in the National Collegiate Driving [Championship for a chance to go to the finals in Daytona, Fla. The Photo by MICHAEL SANCHEZ local contest was held last weekend and was hosted by the Texas A&M Sports Car Club. Salaries still below national average Texas paying profs 5.1 percent more I By SONDRA PICKARD Staff Writer ■rofessors teaching in Te Riniversities are getting paid an v|fage of 5.1 percent more than in 984. but probably not enough to §ep Texas from falling behind jjner states in recruiting and retain- ■quality educators, says a survey |;the Texas College and University Hem Coordinating Board. ■me survey indicates that the 1985 Hy increase rates are above the linimum levels funded by the |xas Legislature, but Higher Edu- Ijon Commissioner Kenneth Ash- prth says the figures are insignifi- |nt in comparison to increases of |to 6 percent across the nation. Institution Average Salaries for University Faculty 1985-86 Professors zaxxxsMricavaKSKSsar Associate Professors Assistant Professors vasamasEzamssa: Texas A&M University.. $44,521 $33,588 $27,405 Texas Tech University. 43,869 32,502 27,372 University of Texas at Austin 48,315 33,204 29.280 University of Texas at Dallas 46,628 34,023 28,947 University University of Houston Park at 47,060 34,279 28,795 Ashworth says every Texas uni- schools, including Texas A&M, have Texas is slipping from the national versity is trying to pay its faculty as been forced to borrow money from average,” Ashworth says. “Other much as possible with available sources not designated for salaries. c t i • funds. But in order to do this, “The institutions realize that ^ ee l-' ow salaries, page 14 NASA officials believe rocket was ruptured Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA officials, increasingly confi dent they can identify the cause of Challenger’s disaster and fly again soon, believe a rupture in the right rocket booster may have triggered the explosion that destroyed the shuttle and killed its crew. NASA sources apparently feel so close to a solution to Tuesday’s tra gedy that they are talking about fly ing again as early as June if the test ing and correction procedures are completed. A flight that had been scheduled by the shuttle Columbia for June 24 appeared to be the earliest possible. Search teams, fighting strong At lantic currents, continued to bring in Challenger’s spreading debris Sun day, including a five-ton rocket frag ment. The search area was extended to more than 40,000 square miles. The apparent rupture in the strong rocket casing — whether at a seam or elsewhere — had the effect of pointing a torch at the side of Challenger’s fuel tank. The theory is that the flame either burnt through the tank or a “destruct package,” causing the explosion, or raised the tank pressure to intolerable limits with the same result. This theory remained just that. NASA’s acting administrator, Wil liam Graham, the only agency offi cial speaking on the record, said Sunday that the agency still is looking for other causes for the ex plosion. Photographs released by NASA show a tongue of flame apparently lashing upward from the exhaust of the right booster rocket into an area that films of previous launches showed to be clear of fire or flame. The flame was “somewhere in this vicinity,” Graham said as he made the rounds of Sunday television talk shows. He pointed to a “field joint” — the seam between the lowest seg ment of the right booster and the second segment. “We haven’t yet finished the anal ysis and measurements on film to identify the exact point at which the lume (of flame) appeared,” Gra- am said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” And on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” he said “we haven’t done the mea surements yet to see whether it was at the seam or near the seam..” There has been published specu lation, based on unidentified sources, that the finger of flame ei ther burned through the fuel tank wall and ignited its huge supply of liquid hydrogen, or that it set off the destruction mechanism by lighting a primer cord. But Charles Redmond, a NASA spokesman, said just heating the tank would have turned the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen to gas, thus increasing the pressure beyond the bursting point. Hydrogen must be kept at minus 423 degrees Fahr enheit and oxygen at minus 297 de grees to stay liquid. Graham, asked how soon shuttle flights might resume, replied that there was “no way to say what time we can go forward.” But he added, “This is a funda mentally sound system. It’s gone through 24 successful flights. There was obviously an accident. There is a problem there. But the overall con figuration and design, we believe to be fundamentally sound and we be lieve it won’t take a very long time to get this problem corrected.” See related story, page 10 Phillipine group trying to stop election fraud Associated Press ■ | MANILA, Philippines — Gov- Lernment and independent elec- | tion officials agreed Sunday to phare early returns from this peek’s presidential election to Iprevent fraud. But some opposi- ? tion leaders said pro-government ! news media could use selected re turns to declare President Ferdi- Inand E. Marcos an early winner. I Officials of the Commission on I Elections and a private watchdog I group, the National Movement Kor Free Elections, or NAMF- KREL, met for more than four [hours to negotiate a unified |“quick count” of Friday’s election. I Representatives of both sides [ said they agreed to share early re- iturns from the nation’s 90,000 I precincts, which sometimes have Itrouble communicating with the capital. — In other developments Sun day, about 6,000 students and workers of the militant group Bayan (Country) marched on the presidential palace and burned effigies of Marcos and President Reagan as they called for an elec tion boycott. Rally leaders said they expected Marcos, president for 20 years, to rig the election. Some Bayan leaders, however, have resigned to back his rival, Corazon Aquino. NAMFREL’s role has been tac itly endorsed by both the Roman Catholic church and the U.S. gov ernment, which is sending a 19- member delegation to observe the election. Marcos supporters accuse NAMFREL of favoring Aquino. Her supporters say cheating was widespread in past elections and that they do not trust the the commission. Curfew issued in Haitan community Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The govern ment Sunday ordered a partial curfew in Cap Haitien, a flashpoint of demonstrations against President-for-Life Jean Claude Duvalier of Haiti, and restricted foreign reporters to Port- au-Prince. Government-owned Radio National said Cap Haitien’s 80,000 residents have been ordered to keep indoors between the hours of 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. No reason for the curfew was given, and it was not known immediately if it would be en forced for more than one day. It was the first curfew officially ordered in Haiti since Duvalier declared a 30-day state of siege Friday in the im poverished nation. Cap Haitien, Haiti’s second largest city, is about 125 miles north of Port-au-Prince on the Atlantic coast. The government communique also ordered all owners of radio transmitters to report their location to authorities. Eleven people have been killed since demon strations began a week ago in Cap Haitien. Three people were shot to death there last Mon day, and three people were trampled to death Wednesday when demonstrators mobbed a CARE warehouse. Five people died Friday in demonstrations in Port-au-Prince. Haiti’s Information Minister Adrien Ray mond announced Sunday in a second commu nique distributed by his office that all foreign journalists had been restricted to the capital. Guy Mayer, the ministry’s director-general, said “We are asking journalists to register and ask permission of this office before they try to go to the rural areas and other cities.” No reason was given immediately for the or der, nor was there any indication how long it would remain in force. An uneasy calm settled on Port-au-Prince Sunday. Heavily armed members of the uni formed militia, called the Volunteers for Na tional Service, kept patrol in small, unmarked cars, firing at random. Disturbances were reported in Cap Haitien Saturday where funeral services were held for three people killed last Monday. The U.S. Embassy said it received reports that security forces used tear gas and gunfire to con trol an early morning demonstration, but there were no reports of casualties. Missionaries used a ham radio to report anti government demonstrations in Gonaives, 60 miles northeast of the capital, and in St. Marc, 50 miles north of Port-au-Prince. Gonaives is where the protests began Nov. 28, Jackson Snyder, 55, and his wife Betty, co-di- rectors of Mission Possible, said their missiona ries reported protesters controlled the highway between Gonaives and St. Marc, having erected at least 15 roadblocks with tree trunks, debris and burning tires. The missionaries said the mob that broke into a government warehouse Friday night at dock- side in Saint-Marc either destroyed or looted eight vehicles and $500,000 worth of donated food, medicine and other supplies belonging to Mission Possible, a Protestant charity based in Fort Pierce, Fla. In an address to the nation Friday, Duvalier pledged to rectify the “unequal and shocking” distribution of wealth among Haiti’s 6 million people. Most Haitians have a per capital income of less than $150 a year. Duvalier was expected to reveal a new eco nomic plan Monday or Tuesday, Raymond said after the address. \S. official expecting largest defense cut ever Associated Press WASHINGTON — Defense Sec- ry Caspar W. Weinberger will k a $320 billion defense authori zation this year but Congress likely vill respond with the largest defense ut in U.S. history, according to the ■irman of the House Armed Serv er Committee. | Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., said Weinberger can expect to receive no more than $260 billion for fiscal 1987 beginning Oct. 1 because of the severe limits posed by the Gramm- Hudman deficit reduction plan. And aesaid cuts in defense authorization $uld range from $60 billion to $90 Tion or more. uts of that magnitude will force gress to probe the foundation es of Reagan administration de fense and national security policy, questioning, for example, the na tion’s continued ability to pay for ex tended U.S. military commitments around the world or for the Penta gon’s drive to build a 600-ship Navy, Aspin said. In an interview, Aspin, who has headed the Armed Services Com mittee for the last year, appeared to relish the consequences of Gramm- Rudman. Referring to the defense secretary by his nickname, “Cap,” Aspin said: “Old Cap is up there smoking about $320 (billion). How do you get through to the guy? We’re going to go down to $260 (billion). Yoo hoo Cap, here we come. “Can you believe where they are,” Aspin laughed. “They just have got themselves in an awful mess. It’s un believable. This is going to be the most interesting year you have ever seen.” “I am taking more than a perverse delight in this,” Aspin said, respond ing to more questions.” Although administration sources said President Reagan will propose a fiscal 1987 budget calling for de fense spending of $282 billion, As pin contended Weinberger is seek ing defense budget authority of some $320 billion. In Aspin’s analysis, large cuts will now be made in defense this year re gardless of whether the automatic sequestration provisions of Gramm- Rudman are triggered largely be- See Congressman, page 14 U.S. Army seeking to prove tank-like taxi not a deathtrap Associated Press FORT HOOD — Green-faced camouflaged soldiers scampered through the brush, their M-16 ri fles blazing. Tanks shrouded by smoke advanced on a “Soviet- controlled” hill as a line of Brad ley fighting vehicles blasted enemy positions and delivered in fantrymen to the front. The Army played out a war on the Central Texas range last week. The objective: Force the re treat of Congressional critics who say the Bradley, a $1.5 million tank-like troop taxi, is the Penta gon’s latest lemon. The tactic: let reporters kick the treads, fire the 25 milimeter cannon, give it a spin around the prairie past cattle and mesquite trees and see the controversial weapon in action. A made-for-television war. The aluminium-sided Bradley, which can travel at 40 mph, kick up a huge cloud of dust and give you a ride similar to a New York subway, is likely to go to battle again in Washington budget hearings this spring. Critics say it’s too vulnerable on the modern battlefield, a weak sided, fire-prone deathtrap for the soldiers it is designed to carry to the front. But the Army, which has al ready bought more than 2,000 Bradleys and wants a total of 6,832, says it would have to change its tactics if Congress kills its high-tech, high-speed baby that fires on the move and fights at night. And the Pentagon has launched an all-out offensive to keep the Bradleys coming off the assembly line. Last week’s rough riding was officially called a “me dia visit,” but the troops dubbed it See Army, page 14