3 CS mayor: Water may be White defends decision to test A&M's Crite gearing up for unfit to drink by year 2000 educators on television NIT game against Wyoming — Page 4 — Page 8 — Page 14 — Te x asA &M m m -m • The Battalion idle re the faster more * culator, istacles. bl. 83 No. 116 GSPS 075360 16 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 12, 1986 et - iS. 'blern I stronaut uty limited or pilots in military Associated Press PACE CENTER, Houston — le Department of Defense plans to limit the assignment of military pi- Bas astronauts to Five or six years, Being NASA to search for more ci- Ban pilots who would not come un- dtl this restriction. B)uane Ross, manager of the as tronaut selection office at the John son Space Center, said Tuesday that almall group of astronauts, about llto 12, will be selected this spring film about 2.000 applications being •reviewed. \nother personnel officer, Te- a Gomez, said the flow of astro naut applications received by the ■tional Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration has increased since the |an 28 explosion of Challenger that killed seven crew members. ■Gomez said the strict military limi- Hion has been under consideration foi some time and is not related to the Challenger accident. Hlhere are 95 astronauts in the corps, Gomez said. Forty-five are military officers who can be recalled to active military service, and she said the Department of Def ense has served notice that all military pilots fe the future will be limited in the amount of time they can spend as as- tipnauts. PRoss said the agency was looking See Astronaut, page 12 Sandman Photo by GREG BAILEY A workman cuts into a piece of sculptered masonry at the Hal- bouty Geosciences Building. Workmen are cutting and sanding the intricate facade as part of ongoing renovation. Arrests ordered for 2 of Marcos’ legislators Associated Press MANILA, Philippines — Presi dent Corazon Aquino’s government issued arrest orders Tuesday for two Marcos legislators, now in hiding, who are accused of killing her sup porters before and after the Feb. 7 election. A government news release said Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile ordered the arrests of National As semblymen Arturo Pacificador, an assistant majority leader, and Or lando Dulay. Both went under ground when former President Fer dinand E. Marcos, who had ruled for 20 years, fled to Hawaii on Feb. 26 with his family and retinue. In other developments: • Aquino scheduled her first full Cabinet meeting for Wednesday. On the agenda is a proposal to proclaim a revolutionary government and dis solve the National Assembly, in which Marcos’ New Society Movement holds two-thirds of the seats. • Exiled leaders of a Moslem se paratist rebellion returned to nego tiate autonomy for the Moslem mi nority. The Philippines also is plagued by a communist insurgency, in which Aquino says she will try to achieve a cease-fire. • An official U.S. team arrived to spend a week assessing the Aquino government’s needs in U.S. military and economic aid. Pacificador is wanted in the Feb. 11 assassination of Evelio Javier, Aquino’s campaign chairman in the central Philippine province of An tique, and also faces murder charges in the deaths of seven of Javier’s fol lowers. Javier ran against Pacifica dor in the 1984 National Assembly election. Prosecutors had recommended action.against Pacificador while Mar cos still was in power, but nothing was done. Dulay is sought in a series of kill ings and kidnappings of Aquino’s followers in the northern province of Quirino. Some of Aquino’s advisers want her to proclaim a revolutionary gov ernment to make it easier to reform the system Marcos left behind. Oth ers say the action would be superflu ous because she clearly gained power through a popular revolu tion. The National Assembly declared Marcos the election victor, which it had the power to do under the con stitution the former president wrote during martial law in 1973. That proclamation led to the military-civil rebellion that drove him into exile. Three leaders of a Moro National Liberation Front faction who arrived from Malaysia said they were accept ing Aquino’s invitation to negotiate autonomy for the southern Minda nao region’s estimated six million Moslems, who comprise almost 10 percent of the country’s population. The front began fighting the Mar cos government in 1972. Officials said more than 50,000 people were killed in the first four years, when the rebels gained control of substan tial areas on Mindanao and other smaller islands. m Security director: Don't be easy victim Wiatt says A&M not Wonderland By LOYD BRUMFIELD Reporter , Students need to make themselves aware that they are vulnerable to crime on campus, says Bob Wiatt, director of security and traffic at Texas Ml. Wiatt says many times students are easy victims for crimes such as assaults or thefts because they lievethey are safe. “Students here have to realize that there are Ipeople out there who will take advantage of their paivety and vulnerability,” Wiatt says. “Many students here live in an ‘Alice In Won- Jerland’ fantasy world,” Wiatt says. “They aren’t employing basic common sense and they don’t Relieve it can happen to them. Well, it can.” Wiatt says even though more serious crimes like aggravated assaults are a rarity at A&M, stu- ents should still take every possible precaution. Wiatt says the University Police provides offi- er more itative just t. SW cer escorts for those who want it, but walking alone at night is still dangerous, he says. “A woman walking alone at 3 a.m. has got to realize she’s a high risk,” Wiatt says. Wiatt says most of the people who commit crimes on campus, especially thefts, are students. “The idea that all Ags do not lie, cheat, or steal is not entirely true,” Wiatt says. “These people are opportunists, not professional thieves.” Despite the Aggie code of honor, Wiatt says A&M leads all other universities in the state in “these little petty larcenies.” A majority of crimes committed at A&M are thefts of property, Wiatt says. “Stolen books or backpacks are eating us up,” he says. “People don’t keep their property safe. They leave their belongings out in the open or their doors unlocked and things get stolen. Wiatt says assaults on campus are almost non existent, and most of the reported cases are fights between students. In 1985, there were 31 assaults at A&M, Wiatt says. In the same year, there were three aggra vated assaults — cases where someone has suf fered severe bodily injury or has been attacked with a weapon, Wiatt says. “We’ve been very lucky here,” Wiatt says. “We’re pretty safe as far as personal attacks are concerned. We’ve had no murders on campus, and no rapes in almost four years.” At the moment, vandalism is a more serious problem than assault, especially vandalism of cars, Wiatt says. A favorite spot for car vandals is the Commons area, Wiatt says. Wiatt says from January 1985 to January 1986 there were seven burglaries of cars in parking an nex 24 near the Commons and five cases of crim inal mischief. Criminal mischief is when property is dam aged in some way, Wiatt says. Another area where cars are vandalized is See Wiatt, page 12 Spring brings a twist; tornado season's back From staff and wire reports Bryan-College Station got a small taste of what the beginning of spring means Tuesday night when the National Weather Serv ice issued a tornado watch until 1 a.m. The watch, which was canceled for the local area at about 11:20 p.m., included a large portion of north, central and eastern Texas. This year, weather watchers and emergency service workers are eyeing the onset of tornado season warily, recalling the last two years when twisters brought devastation far from the usual Midwestern “tornado alley.” Twisters in the Carolinas two years ago, and in Ohio and Penn sylvania last year, claimed dozens of lives in a pair of violent out breaks that left hundreds injured and millions of dollars in damage in their wakes. Those storms helped remind Americans tornadoes pose a threat in every state, not just the famous tornado alley stretching from Nebraska south through Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, where they are traditionally most common. This year’s first tornado struck Feb. 2, leaving what government meteorologists termed consider able damage in the vicinity of Mineral Wells, Texas. Tornadoes are the offspring of changing weather. The warmth replacing winter cold can spawn twisters, making the violent storms most common as spring arrives across the nation. Government statistics show tor nadoes increase sharply in March, fatalities peak in April, and the total number of storms reaches its maximum in May. It was last May 31, that Penn sylvania suffered its worst tor nado outbreak ever, according to the National Oceanic and Atmo spheric Administration. Sixty- three deaths were recorded in the Keystone State. An additional 11 people were killed in Ohio, and the storms also caused damage in western New York state and Canada. It was the worst outbreak of tornadoes since the “Superout break” recorded on April 3-4, 1974, when twisters claimed 315 lives in a path through 11 states, according to the National Cli matic Data Center. Overall, 1985 recorded 92 tor nado deaths in the United States, slightly below average, while 1984 was above average with 123 fatali ties, government records show. See related story, page 9 Expert says Russians to build space station Associated Press SPACE CENTER, Houston — The Soviet Union may be prepar ing as early as this week to link up three large craft already in orbit and then launch a trio of cosmo nauts to inspect and activate a large space station, an American expert on the Russian space pro gram said Tuesday. James Oberg, a space engineer and author who closely monitors the Soviet space program, said three unmanned Russian craft launched earlier have now drifted to within four miles of each other and he expects that they soon will be linked to form a large space station. Oberg said the Salyut 7 space station, which was launched in 1982 and has been manned for long periods of time, is already linked to a craft called Cosmos 1686. The dual craft, he said, have drifted into a closely parallel orbit now with the Mir, a large Salyut- type craft that the Soviets have said will form the core of a new space station. The Mir was launched Feb. 20. Oberg said the Salyut-Cosmos combination is in an orbit of 213 miles and the Mir is orbiting at 209 miles. The craft have orbital periods that differ by only a few seconds. Three cosmonauts experi enced in space walking are pre pared to fly in the Soyuz T-15 spacecraft, said Oberg, and could be launched as early as Thursday. Based on orbital calculations and the techniques usually used by the Soviets, Oberg said the Russians cosmonauts could be launched at 3:35 p.m. Moscow time and then effect a rendezvous and docking with the space sta tion combination the next day. He said a window for the manned launch opens every other day for the rest of the week, with launch time slipping 48 minutes later each day. Effects of tanning beds debated By KAREN BOEHNKE Reporter Tanning beds recently have be come popular, but those who use them to get a deep tan throughout the year may be causing irreparable harm to their skin, according to one dermatologist. Dr. Clyde Caperton, a local physi cian, says, “Sun booths artificially re produce ultraviolet radiation, which is the same as sunlight. If it pen etrates deep enough, it does damage below the skin, producing skin can cer when you get into your 50s.” However, two owners of tanning bed salons say tanning beds are safer than the sun. Charles Teague, owner of Perfect Tan, says, “It’s a safer alternative than tanning in the sun, no question about that.” He says some people who were initially very negative about tanning beds are changing their minds as they are exposed to more informa tion. “I can recall when people were be ing cautioned about using micro- wave ovens,” Teague says. Both Teague and Charles Barrett, co-owner of TANU, say the older “You can overeat or overtan. I think done with proper supervision and in moderation, it’s very safe and can be extremely worthwhile.” — Charles Teague, owner of Perfect Tan. tanning booths are harmful, but the new tanning beds are safe. Barrett says tanning booths emitted a large quantity of the more harmful beta rays, while the tanning beds emit mostly alpha rays and only 2 percent beta rays. Caperton, however, disagrees. “They may tell you that this kind of booth won’t hurt you as much as others,” Caperton says. “That’s not true. “The sun booths are no better or no worse than the sun. If you overdo it, you can harm yourself.” Caperton says many people who go to the tanning salons are the ones who have trouble getting a tan, such as those with blond hair and blue eyes. He says these people are most susceptible to the damages of ultra violet radiation. Barrett says any amount of sun light you get is bad. “If we did the best possible thing for our skin we’d wear long sleeved shirts and sun screen all the time,” Barrett says. “No one wants to do that.” Teague says he thinks people who use tanning beds take pride in their appearance and are more body-con scious than people who don’t. “They are people into physical fit ness, people who want to look their best,” Teague says. Barrett says people who go to tan ning booths often are preparing for a special event such as an interview or a wedding. Tanning beds also are very popular before spring break, he says. “So many people are going to Gal veston, Padre or wherever,” he says. “It doesn’t make sense to go to the beach white and get fried the first day and then be miserable the rest of your vacation.” Interest in tanning is fueling the growth of new tanning bed establish ments in the area. In the past two years at least five tanning salons have opened in Bryan-College Sta tion. Barrett says the current popular ity of tanning beds is not a fad. “The way technology is increasing with tanning equipment, it’s here to stay,” he says. Teague says it takes about three weeks to get a good, safe tan. He says people come in four days before spring break wanting to get a good tan quickly, but that’s not possible. Although Teague says tanning booths are safe, he says some pre cautions need to be taken to protect the skin and eyes. “You can abuse anything,” he says. “You can overeat or overtan. I think done with proper supervision and in moderation, it’s very safe and can be extremely worthwhile.” Caperton says that, in modera tion, the ultraviolet radiation emitted from the tanning beds won’t hurt a person’s skin any more than being in the sun an average length of time. But it’s the cumulative effect of radiation which can be detrimental to a person’s skin, Caperton says.