Experts advise how to save money on utility expenses — Page 3 A&M tries to forget NCAA snub in time for first-round of NIT — Page 8 is? indie iare the s faster s, more dculator, abstacles - Texas A&M ■ % m m V • The Battalion 'o . 83 No. 117 GSPS 075360 12 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, March 13, 1986 leach Dance (pdetsin Squadron 5 play Hacky Sack Wednesday J the Quadrangle during the Corps of Cadets Photo by MICHAEL SANCHEZ beach day. Everyone in the Corp was encouraged to dress and act as if they were at the beach. Reagan sends Habib to Central America Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan, trying to bolster his case for military aid for Nicaraguan rebels, sent special envoy Philip Habib to Central America on Wednesday and said critics who claim the United States is not interested in a nego tiated settlement “are making ridicu lous noises.” There was renewed talk about compromise between the White House and Congress on the $100 million package Reagan has pro posed, but administration officials said privately the president had not heard any proposals he deemed ac ceptable. Reagan, himself, said he was not trying to signal a willingness to com promise but would listen to any of fer. He did not rule out the possibil ity of delaying delivery of aid for up to 75 days, to give negotiations a chance. “We’re continuing to talk about all possibilities like that,” Reagan said. Yet, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said, “We’re not inter ested in anything short of getting the president’s package approved, with out restrictions.” Habib’s mission drew fire from Nicaraguan President Daniel Or tega. “He (Reagan) is trying to impress on international public opinion that he is interested in a negotiated solu tion, but what he really wants to do is complement his policy of war and terrorism against Nicaragua,” Or tega said in Managua. Habib’s three-nation itinerary does not include a stop in Nicaragua. “You don’t go where you’re not in vited,” Reagan said. The Nicaraguan embassy in Washington, however, said Habib was welcome in Managua “if the ad ministration honestly wants to nego tiate.” Reagan said Habib has the au thority to visit Nicaragua for talks with the Sandinista regime “if any- See President, page 7 MB proposes cuts in research funds By MONA L. PALMER Stall Writer fhe federal Office of Manage- Jnt and Budget has proposed to educe the amount of money univer- lies can claim as administrative Its of federally sponsored re- arch. bon Bugh, director of systems inklysis and special projects, said Itixas A&M’s administrative cost Sobsists of general, department, [sponsored project and student ad- limstrations. The cost is included in the over- 1, or indirect cost, of research, bid. Effective April 1, the sum of these our administrative costs can’t ex- 26 percent of the project’s total earch cost, he said. Bugh said the revision is a two- year phase-in ceiling that ultimately will result in a 20 percent cap by April 1, 1987. “The idea here is to save the fed eral government money,” Bugh said. “They believe this will save them $200 million annually.” Currently, A&M charges 38 per cent of its total project cost to over head, and the administrative portion is less than 20 percent, he said. Jo Ann Treat, president of A&M’s research foundation, said the revi sion won’t affect A&M this year or next year and said the University’s administrative costs are lower be cause A&M isn’t as bureaucratic as cither institutions. Treat said the difficulty in the re vision is in the precedent it sets. “This is one rather large step in the direction of putting caps on cost elements — some of those (caps) may hurt us,” she said. Treat said the 26 percent cap also doesn’t consider variations in uni versities. Duwayne Anderson, associate provost for research, said the revi sion is complex and easily misunder stood. Several universities will com- plain on the basis of misunderstanding, he said. But many universities also are complaining about the process and the fact that the revision came as an order and intrudes upon university affairs, he said. Mike Lytle, special assistant to the chancellor for federal relations, said universities usually have a say on the revisions and give input before the proposals are released. But this time the proposal came as a shock to the universities and the OMB gave universities 30 days to comment on the change, he said. Lytle said the OMB can act on the comments or choose not to. A congressional hearing is sched uled for Thursday to discuss the OMB’s revision, he said. The hear ing won’t change the revision, but it will show congressional interest in the issue, Lytle said. “It’s a review, oversight and in quiry into the problem,” he said. Treat said the OMB disregarded congressional orders that requires it See OMB proposes, pa£e 7 Proposed Contra aid troubles Latin America Associated Press MEXICO CITY — While Pres ident Reagan pushes for approval of $100 million in aid to Nicara gua’s Contra rebels, Latin Ameri can nations concerned about es calating violence in the region are voicing increasing support for diplomatic solutions. Even in South America, where four nations are giving renewed vigor to the lagging Contadora peace effort, there is concern that violence could trickle down to af fect all. Argentine Foreign Minister Dante Caputo said last week that South American nations would be naive to think they could remain unaffected by a spreading con flict in Central America. “An outbreak of war would produce a rarification of hemi spheric relations, something which we don’t want,” Caputo said. “This is also going to pro duce a strong polarization of pub lic opinion; we are going to see Argentines against Argentines.” Mexico, Colombia, Panama and Venezuela formed the Con tadora group in January 1983, taking the name from the Pana manian resort island where the first meeting was held. They ar gue that, although no concrete results have been achieved, the threat of a generalized war in Central America has been averted during the negotiations. The effort appeared to founder by late last year, but re vived at a January meeting in Caraballeda, Venezuela, attended also by the South American sup port group of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Peru. In a document titled “Carabal leda Message for Peace and De mocracy,” the ministers said the Contadora group offers the only hope to overcome “the arms race, foreign intervention and the poli tics of force” in Central America. In a recent interview with the Washington Post, Colombian President Belisario Betancur said, “An initiative such as that which Reagan has taken to ask for $100 million from Congress is mis taken. I know that the American government knows that Latin America has its own language, and that language is expressed through Contadora.” ources say NASA brought more remains, debris ashore n Associated Press [APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The sal- : ship USS Preserver steamed into port idnesday night and what sources said vere more remains of Challenger’s astro- nlits were loaded into three ambulances md driven to a hospital. B\lso aboard were parts of the flight deck. Jit astronaut’s personal effects and two mused space suits, as well as other debris rom the shattered shuttle’s cabin, the ources said. ■The big vessel clocked at Port (Canaveral lithe Navy’s Trident submarine dock, a se- :ure area across a channel away from the al.lic. It had not been expected to return jlhore until Thursday. The remains were transferred to a hospi tal at nearby Patrick Air Force Base, where other body parts were taken after being re covered Saturday. Meanwhile, the county medical examiner reported Wednesday that NASA had pre vented a legal dispute over the astronauts’ bodies by agreeing to let his staff observe the autopsies. The flight deck was where Challenger’s pilot, co-pilot and two of the five other as tronauts sat during the shuttle’s brief flight. The spacesuits recovered were aboard in case of an emergency space walk. The crew member’s personal effects were recovered inside a storage locker. A four-man search submarine, mean while, located a piece of solid rocket booster that a Navy spokeswoman said could be from the segment of the right booster be lieved responsible for the shuttle explosion. The 4-foot-by-5-foot piece of debris from the rear part of a rocket, weighing 400 to 500 pounds, is believed to contain propellant and part of the external tank at tachment ring, Lt. Cmdr. Deborah Bur nette said. Sources had said the medical examiner’s office might seek a court order unless the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration and Air Force turned over the re mains in accordance with state law, which requires the local medical examiner to con duct an autopsy on any person who is slain or dies by accident. The statutes apply even if deaths occur on federal property, or, as in the case of the Challenger accident, they occur away from any jurisdiction but are brought into one. Some remains of the astronauts killed when Challenger exploded 73 seconds after launch on Jan. 28 were brought ashore se cretly Saturday night and were taken to nearby Patrick Air Force Base for examina tion by forensic experts, sources said. Dr. Laudie McHenry, chief medical ex aminer for Brevard County, said Wednes day: “Since the discovery of the Challenger capsule with its human remains, there has been essentially a blackout of communica tions between NASA, the Air Force and this office. Two days ago, a conference between representatives of Patrick Air Force Base Hospital, the Armed Forces Institute of Pa thology and the Brevard County medical examiner gave lip service to a coordinated, multiagency investigation, with favorable comments by all present. “As of 10 a.m. today, March 12, tele phone communication from NASA indi cates that representatives of the Brevard County medical examiner may be present at the investigations to be performed.” The statement added, “There are no planned lawsuits or court hearings concern ing this investigation.” Still and television photos were taken of the newly found booster part and will be brought to shore for development and analysis. See related story, page 5 «3VVS oy ■puter 3 rn =senUti ve ;.onal ind pst *lget. SW loder soys insurance industry crisis phony Associated Press AUSTIN — The insurance in- ustry has manufactured a phony isisas the launch pad for a push |)r new laws that could mean ligher profits, Ralph Nader said Wednesday. I “Through a well-orchestrated jampaign, the insurance lobby is I'ying to hoodwink the public, ie media and the Legislature to believing that the only way tat the industry can continue to insure risks is to limit our basic ghts to hold wrongdoers re- fconsible for the harm they puse,’' Nader said. An industry spokesman said the crisis that has caused increas- ig premiums is real, not man- factured. Rick Gentry said judges and juries have been ap proving higher awards in liability and personal injury cases. “We do know there are some funny things going on out there,” said Gentry, of the Insurance In formation Institute. He said the Nader claims are based on a fear that “there is some kind of boogey man out there.” “No one in our industry has any desire to inhibit people from being compensated. Our com plaint is things are out of bal ance,” Gentry said. The Southwestern Insurance I n f o rmation Service said Wednesday the insurance crunch is a result of “a civil justice system bordering on a lottery mentality.” list not a consumers' guide' Hospitals’ death rates reported Associated Press WASHINGTON — The govern ment on Wednesday put out a list of some 270 hospitals reporting unusu ally high or low death rates among Medicare patients, but warned would-be patients against using it as a consumers’ guide to hospitals. The list immediately generated debate over whether it smears repu table institutions, provides valuable new information for consumers, or repudiates hospitals with high death rates. The Health Care Financing Ad ministration, which runs Medicare, released the statistical tables along with a host of precautionary statements that the numbers them selves “have no intrinsic meaning” and, therefore, are unreliable for judging a person’s chances of success in a hospital. That assessment was shared by in dustry representatives, some of whom called the report unfair, mis leading and meaningless. Jack Owen, executive vice presi dent of the American Hospital Asso ciation, said, “It really is of no value to the consumer. You can’t tell from the list whether a hospital is good or bad. . . . Our concern is that it will frighten cause apprehension among the elderly.” But others said breakdowns of the mortality figures to show death rates for specific operations, such as coro nary bypass surgery, will provide im portant guidance for patients facing surgery and trying to choose a hospi tal — guidance that never before has been made available. Sidney M. Wolfe, of the Public Citizen Health Research Group, said “What it does is allow people to make choices they were shut out from making in the past.” The data were compiled as part of routine reviews of the care given pa tients under Medicare, the govern ment health insurance program for the elderly or disabled. The hospi tals were picked by a computer as “outliers,” hospitals whose death rates fell well outside the projected range. Some shortcomings in the data were immediately apparent. One Nevada institution, for exam ple, was cited because it had a death rate of 87.6 percent, while the gov ernment’s computer said its pro jected death rate based on diagnoses should have been 22.5 percent. But the institution is the Adelson Hospice of Las Vegas. A hospice treats only terminally ill patients and the government’s computer is not programmed to take that into ac count. Owen, of the AHA, said inner-city hospitals also may be unfairly por trayed. Terminally ill patients in wealth communities may choose to hire nurses and go home for their last days, he said, lowering the hospi tal’s death rate; poor patients in in ner-city hospitals don’t have that op tion and will die in the hospital.