Twenty computer dealers display products at Micro Fair — Page 3 Wyoming cuts A&M's time in NIT short with 79-70 win — Page 7 Texas A&M m m m • The Battalion S? fB3 Mo. 118 GSPS 075360 10 pages indie |r - 1 College Station, Texas Friday, March 14, 1986 are die R :';:bnator ilculalor, t _ ■ a wiveiIs new iixbill 75?, | 0 ^ 0 met - ues. roblem Lible. Associated Press Washington — Senate fi- ■ Committee Chairman Bob Ifood on Thursday introduced ivitli President Reagan’s support a bill that would produce the sdsweeping changes in the fed- Bix system in more than 30 rs, reducing individual income Hiy an average 8.4 percent, flu legislation would raise Con ner taxes on alcohol, tobacco and oline and shift to corporations a burden of between $110 billion 1SI85 billion over the next five rs. How the excise tax increases (ill affect the total tax picture of ivkluals and businesses is a mat- ofepeculation. lackwood, unveiling the new' plan inews conference, said it would ke the tax system more fair, en- !$hat rich individuals and profit- | companies pay a share of tax, I increase incentives for invest- nlnjob-creating activities. As for ipliiication, the Oregon Republi- i could promise only that “it is not i more complicated than the pre- i tax code.” Irhe committee will start work on legislation next week; Packwood i he hopes the bill will be com- jed by May 1 and ready for Rea- i to sign by Aug. 15. dost changes would take effect :t Jan. 1. he bill includes the provisions See Reagan, page 10 Where’s Springsteen? Photo by ANTHONY S. CASPER A student in Philosophy of the Visual Media, Phi- the Chemistry Building. From left, band members losophy 375, gets a little help from his friends to are Dick O’Leary, Tom Shutt, Brian Davis, Rich- make a video for a class assignment on the steps of ard Storm, and Mark Rose. Soviets put 1st men in space since disaster Associated Press MOSCOW — The Soviet Union launched two veteran cosmonauts Thursday on the First manned space mission since the Challenger disaster at Cape Canaveral, sending them to work aboard a new orbiting lab. State television broke with custom and provided live coverage of the Soyuz T-15 blasting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Soviet central Asia at 3:33 p.m. Moscow time (7:33 a.m. EST). U.S. television networks also broadcast the launch live. The First live coverage of an all- Soviet mission showed the red and white craft streaking into slightly overcast skies above the space center in Kazakhstan. It carried com mander Leonid Kizim and engineer Vladimir Solovev to a rendezvous with the new orbiting station named Mir, which means Peace in Russian. Pass, the official Soviet news agency, said the docking would oc cur in two days. The Mir was launched unmanned from Baikonur on Feb. 20. Reporting the docking date was as unusual as televising the launch when it happened. Soviet officials have not explained the departure from customary practice. Soviet television was quick to show Film of the Jan. 28 Challenger explo sion, which took the lives of all seven astronauts aboard. It shocked many viewers and prompted some to ques tion why a foreign disaster was re ported in detail at once while Soviet space launches, as well as major acci dents and natural disasters, get scant coverage that usually is delayed. Whatever the Kremlin’s purpose, the contrast between Thursday’s successful launch and the Chal lenger tragedy was a way to illustrate the Soviet space program’s achieve ments to audiences here and abroad. Marsha Smith, executive director of the U.S. National Commission on Space, said in Washington that the Soviets could be “trying to demon strate that their space program is peaceful.” James Oberg, an American space engineer and author of several books on the Soviet space program, said in Houston that the launch broadcast was part of a new open ness policy with great propaganda benefits. “It also shows that they have a greater self-confidence in their pro gram,” he said. “It helps concentrate See Soviets, page 10 Sources say shuttle flight recorders, computers retrieved Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Di- s fiave recovered all four flight aiders and some of the five com- ters aboard the shuttle Ghal- iger, and they may provide valu- ie data about the space disaster, trees said Thursday night. Although submerged in salt water • six weeks, the instruments may able to tell investigators about the intents before, and after, Chal- iger exploded 73 seconds into its ;hj Jan. 28, killing the crew of r'en. The sources close to the investiga- m, who spoke on condition of ano- mjty, said the recorders and com- ttilrs were brought ashore edhesday night along with more remains of the crew, parts of the flight deck and other debris. The recovered monitors could provide information on such things as temperatures, acceleration and structural stresses. They were being kept in cool wa ter until they could be cleaned and dried under controlled temperature and humidity conditions at a NASA tape-recorder facility. The computers, which were in complete control of the spacecraft during liftoff, may provide data on how the shuttle reacted during the thousandth of a second after the ex plosion occurred. The USS Preserver, which docked Wednesday night with the new de bris, headed for the search site again Thursday, but turned back after en State cuts funding for women's clinic by about 63.5% lows ijoy nputer >arn more esentativf sonal find just jdget.W By KIM ROY Reporter Some local women will be pay ing more money for health care at Planned Parenthood of Brazos County because of a drastic cut in the center’s state funding, says Sally Miller, director of the clinic. iThe clinic, a private non-profit organization that provides female lealth care, depends primarily on state funds to keep clients’ costs to a minimum, Miller says. ■The only other sources of funding are private donations from the community and client fees. IThe previous three-year con- tivt the clinic had with the state allowed for $210,()()() per each contract year, Miller says. The new contract, which began Sept. 1, allows for $76,000 each year for three years, about a 63.5 percent decrease for each year. “I think it’s just another social program being cut,” Miller says. A government contract is like a Service contract, she says. A cli ent's cost is determined by a pay evaluation, which is done before services are rendered. The evaluation determines if a client is eligible for government assistance by considering such factors as the number of family members and family income. If it is determined that a pa tient is eligible for government assistance, a hill is sent to the gov ernment after services are com pleted for its share of the costs, Miller says. For those who are not entitled to government assistance, there is still a sliding pay scale based on the same factors. Miller says that even though government funds will run out, the same pay evaluation method will be used to evaluate client need. Although truly indigent women still will pay less than oth ers who can better afford the services, the increase in costs will be drastic, Miller says. The exact increase can’t be re- See State, page 10 winds gusting up to 40 mph churned the seas into 10-foot swells. The storm stalled plans to recover a 400-to-500-pound chunk, w'hich some officials say could be the seg ment of the right booster rocket be lieved responsible for the explosion. The chunk was located Wednesday 32 miles northeast of Cape Canave ral. The Preserver slipped into port Wednesday night without running lights in an effort to block news pho tographers and television camera men from obtaining clear pictures. Debris piled on its fantail was cov ered by canvas. Reporters watching from a dis tance estimated that eight containers were placed in three ambulances that met the Preserver. Inside A&M steam tunnels Exploring University from underground an adventure By OLIVIER UYTTEBROUCK Reporter A Texas A&M coed walks near the corner of Nagle and Lamar streets one night shortly after mid night when a hand emerges from a metal grate just a few inches from her feet and waves at her. She has just fallen victim to an en thusiast of what is surely one of the world’s strangest hobbies — steam tunnel exploring. Any honest description of the steam tunnels does not draw an in viting picture of this underground world, at least not in terms of crea ture comfort. Since there is no ventilation in most of the tunnels, strong odors ac cumulate and the air is stiflingly hot and humid. After just a few minutes below, even a T-shirt seems oppresi- vely heavy, and it is quickly drenched in perspiration. In other tunnels, a current of sul try air from some unaccountable source blows constantly. During heavy rains, large amounts of mud wash into the tun nels and even after a dry spell, an inch or two of mud remains in some sections. Roaches are common, tun neling enthusiasts say, and certain parts are supposed to be so infested that they are nearly impassable. A few of the tunnels, such as the one beneath Military Walk, are spa- A few of the steam tunnels are spacious, but most of the passages are little more than crawlspaces. cious and well-lit, but most of the passages are little more than crawlspaces — dark and so cramped that an adult has to stoop to pass through them. To the uninitiated, it isn’t entirely clear w hat lures these people to slide open the heavy metal grates, at odd hours of the morning, and descend rusty ladders and stairways into the bowels of the University, taking care not to catch the eye of the campus security guards. But down they go, taking with them six-packs of beer and paint cans to scrawl their names and mes sages in the tunnels. Graffiti is every where — not just in the bigger tun nels but in the obscure tunnels and hard to reach places as well. It is no exaggeration to say that hundreds, perhaps thousands of messages are painted on the walls and pipes and even traced into the thick dust that covers everything in the tunnels. The Corps of Cadets is strongly implicated in much of the graffiti. One message proclaims: The Army’s finest walk these halls. Another suprising message says: Shuttle panel expects early finish Associated Press WASHINGTON — Presi dential investigators expect tests supervised by outside observers to prove within a month how and why a booster rocket seal caused the space shuttle Challenger to explode. They expect to be able to Fi nally rule out equipment other than the booster seal as the prob able cause within a week or two, well ahead of the June 3 deadline for the panel’s report. “If we need more time, we will ask, but there is no evidence now that we will need it,” said a source close to the presidential Chal lenger commission. T he report is crucial to re sumption of space flights, be cause NASA won’t begin chang ing hardware designs until it is in. The commission is bringing in an outside expert to supervise, because panel members are skep tical of tests conducted by NASA and its rocket contractor, Morton Thiokol, Inc., the source said. The boosters have been the chief suspects all along in the Jan. 28 explosion that claimed seven lives. But one NASA official testiFied only last Friday that tests might take three months to Firmly estab lish them as the cause. The source, who spoke on con dition of anonymity, said the in dependent observer will likely be a quasi-government agency.