Tuesday, February 25,1986/The Battalion/Page 7 World and Nation Source: Low temperatures on booster were reported Associated Press WASHINGTON — Crews exam ining the space shuttle Challenger at close hand shortly before launch re ported abnormally cold tempera tures on one booster rocket over a radio circuit monitored in NASA’s launch control center, a source close to the shuttle investigation said Mon day. But, he said, “these low tempera tures never got the attention they should have.” The issue of what launch officials knew and when they knew it will be explored by the presidential investi gating commission in open hearings Tuesday and Wednesday. “It will all come out tomorrow,” the investigation source said. “It ain’t going to be good. “The American people are going to scream bloody murder.” Meanwhile, Mary Elizabeth Beggs, wife of NASA administrator James M. Beggs, told the Asso ciated Press he will resign in the next few days. Beggs went on unpaid leave last year after a grand jury indicted him on charges stemming from his days as a General Dynamics executive. A top level NASA source said the White House would not immediately name Beggs’ successor but that act ing administrator William Graham, whose appointment Beggs is known to oppose, was unlikely to get the job. Witnesses scheduled to come be fore the commission Tuesday in clude Allan McDonald, the Morton Thiokol engineer who refused to en dorse a recommendation to launch, and Joe C. Kilminster, the firm’s vice-president who signed the rec ommendation. The source said the readings were made by an “ice team” sent out be fore the launch to ensure the shut tle’s fuel tank was not covered with ice that could drop off and damage the ship’s tiles. The team, he said, works like a bomb-disposal squad, reporting over a radio every movement and step around the ship and its toxic, volatile fuels —- so if there is an explosion, experts can trace the movements. “These guys on the pad are re porting continuously where they are and what they are doing on an open net, so if anything goes boom, some one will know what happened,” the investigation source said. He said part of the reason their cold-weather readings did not raise alarm is because “they did this on their own,” using an infrared py rometer, that had not previously been part of the team’s equipment. 10,000 unable to return home in California Part of Boise, Idaho, was cut off Monday as flood control workers blocked streets with a sandbag canal to drain swollen ponds, and about 10,000 Califor nians were still unable to return to homes flooded by more than a week of storms. High water and mudslides caused by weekend rain and melt ing snow closed some Idaho high ways while some roads remained closed in northwestern Nevada, washed by the same nine-day se ries of storms that inundated northern California. Oregon, Washington state and Montana also had scattered road closings caused by flooding, mudslides and washouts from rain and melting snow. Most of the Olivehurst-Linda area, inundated Thursday when a levee burst, was dry enough for residents to start cleaning up. The death toll stands at 20 across the West from the series of storms that started Feb. 11. Nancy Hardaker, a spokeswo man for the state Office of Emer gency Services, said that storm- caused damage in northern Cali fornia was estimated at $319 mil lion. At least 10,872 homes were damaged and 1,463 were de stroyed, she said. Government spells out rights of aged who use Medicare Associated Press WASHINGTON — Facing com plaints that elderly Medicare pa tients are being dumped from hospi tal beds before they are well, the government released on Monday a “bill of rights” spelling out how the aged can fight premature hospital discharges. The statement, including a tele phone number where patients can file an emergency appeal, will be given to each of the 9 million Medi care beneficiaries hospitalized each year, the Health and Human Serv ices Department said. Otis R. Bowen, secretary of the HHS, said:“All patients deserve to have a clear understanding of their rights when they are hospitalized. “With these messages, the Medi care program will be providing im portant information to beneficiaries more directly, more effectively and more helpfully than has been done in the past.” Consumer groups have com plained in recent months that Medi care beneficiaries sometimes were dumped from their hospital beds prematurely because their pre-set Medicare payments had run out. The American Association of Re tired Persons and the People’s Medi cal Society called on the Reagan ad ministration in November to inform Medicare patients of their legal rights against premature discharge. Bowen did not mention those complaints directly. He did say there is no evidence of a “systematic in crease” in premature discharges, and noted that both consumer groups and medical industry groups were consulted in drafting the rights statement. The retired people’s group and the People’s Medical Society have said that hospitals too often simply inform Medicare patients that their benefits have run out and they are being discharged, even though dis charge is not supposed to be in fluenced by payments. The groups said the problems were caused by belt-tightening in Medicare, particularly the pre-set payment rates based on types of ill ness under the so-called prospective payment system. Since 1983, payment rates have been based on the average cost of treating a particular illness. High court dismisses pornography statute Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Su preme Court, in a decision that could hamper local efforts to combat pornography, struck down as un constitutional Monday an Indianap olis ordinance that subjected distrib utors of sexually explicit materials to lawsuits. By a 6-3 vote, the justices said the ordinance, which allowed women in jured by someone who had seen or read pornographic material to sue the maker or seller, interferes with freedom of speech. The Indianapolis ordinance de fined pornography as a practice that discriminates against women by por traying them as sexual objects who enjoy pain or humiliation and pre sents them as sexual objects of vio lence. Women hurt by someone who had seen or read pornograhic material were allowed to sue the maker or seller of the pornography. The ordinance was found uncon stitutional by two lower federal courts, and Indianapolis city officials asked the high court to reinstate the ordinance. The city’s appeal called the ordinance an innovative and promising way to help those it called the victims of pornography, mostly women and children. Despite being told “the record shows that the pornography indus try . . . generates sex-based abuse,” the justices agreed with the lower courts that the ordinance went too far. In other business, the court also agreed to decide by July the consti tutionality of the new law requiring a balanced budget by 1991. The jus tices said they will hear arguments in the case on April 23, and decide it before adjourning for the summer. The court also let stand the Texas “no pass, no play” law that has side lined high school athletes and si lenced band musicians with failing grades. Aggie GOP presents George Strake February 25, 206 MSC 7:00 pm New Members Welcome the dept, of philosophy the dept, of sociology and present Dr. Lawrence Busch: A Lecture in Agricultural Ethics “Agricultural Research: an Instrumental Approach” Is increasing agricultural production always a good thing? How does technology influence goals for U.S. agriculture? 4 p.m. WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 26 510 RUDDER Hours: M-Th 9-1 1 p.m. Sun 12:30-1 1 p.m. Fri.-Sat 9-6 p.m. Get An Early Start On Your Spring Break Tan! A single 30-Minute session in a TAN- U Solaire Tanning Bed is Like Spend- 4 Hours in The Sun TAA/U 104 Old College Main at Northgate Walk-ins are welcome. Call 846-9779 for an appointment. What will you leave behind?? ASS GIFT MEETING WEDNESDAY FEB. 26 8-30 PM LOSE WEIGH MONTH SOS rudder MEMBERSHI NO MONTHLY DUES PLUS *€ PHOTO WET STEAM BATH DESERT DRY SAUNA RELAXING WHIRLPOOL PRIVATE SHOWERS LOCKERS A DRESSING OPEN 24 HOURS WEEKDAYS AGES 1S-M -7 DAYS WEEKLY NUTRITION COUNSELING EXTRA AEMMC f* 20 MINUTE TANNING BEDS NURSERY 846-0053