i Texas oil industry pressing for tax incentives, reforms — Page 7 A&M tracksters look to rise above pack at Texas Relays — Page 12 ■■ The Battalion Vol. 83 No. 128 GSPS 075360 12 pages College Station, Texas Friday, April 4, 1986 ip Elections to be held h B-CS By Craig Renfro Staff Writer I It’s time to wipe the dust off your ■iter registration card and head to lie polls, because Saturday is elec- lon day and up for grabs are spots on the College Station and Bryan ■ty councils and school boards, j The polls open at 7 a.m. and close |a[7 p.m. Voters should bring their Igistration card and vote at the dis- lict indicated on their card, says Di- Bie Jones, College Station city secre tary. Also see: ♦ Ringer, Mcllhaney, page 3 ^Makeup of Bryan, page 3 »Issues in CS, page 4 I Place 2, page 5 College Station polling places are: • Precinct 8 — South Knoll El- Imentary School ' • Precinct 9 — College Station lommunity Center • Precinct 10 — Police Station • Precinct 24 — College Hills El ementary School • Precinct 31 — A&M Consol idated High School • Precinct 32 -— College Fire Sta tion No. 2 • Precinct 33 — Lincoln Center • Precinct 34 — College Station Central Fire Station • Precinct 35 — A&M Presbyte rian Church Bryan polling places are: • Precinct 4 — Carver School • Precinct 5 — Fellowship Hall • Precinct 6 — Edge Community Center • Precinct 7 — Steep Hollow Community Center • Precinct 11 — Crockett El- fenientary School 1 •Precinct 12 — Sul Ross Elemen- [tary School ( • Precinct 13 — Henderson El ementary School • Precinct 14 — Ben Milam El ementary School • Precinct 15 — Fannin Elemen tary School 16 — Bowie Elemen- College Station 18 19 • Precinct taiy School • Precinct | tary School • Precinct [ Fire Station • Precinct | etnentary School • Precinct 22 — Outer • Precinct 23 — tary School i • Precinct gion Hall • Precinct 26 i School • Precinct 27 Baptist Church • Precinct 28 17 — Travis Elemen- Bryan Central - Bonham El- Photo by Jamie Stewart Going Bananas Michael Adams, a junior at Texas A&M, finishes up his banana split with a touch of whipped cream. Arab terrorist on jet sought for TWA blast ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Police in several nations said Thursday they were searching for an Arab ter rorist suspected of planting under her airline seat a bomb that ex ploded later, killing four Americans. Police sources said the explosives were planted under seat 10F, which was blown out of the TWA jetliner over southern Greece on Wednes day. Italy’s interior minister said that was the seat the woman had occu pied on an earlier flight, and Greek police sources said she may have hid the bomb in a life preserver. The woman, May Elias Mansur, was a passenger Wednesday morn ing on the Boeing 727 when it flew from Cairo to Athens, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The jet then flew to Rome and the bomb went off during its return trip to Athens that af ternoon. An airport security official in Cairo confirmed that a Lebanese woman using that name boarded in Cairo. The woman may have loaded plastic explosives into a life pre server under seat IGF during the flight from Cairo, then made a con nection to Beirut at Athens, the Greek sources said. The bomb went off under that seat. The Italian news agency ANSA quoted investigators it did not iden tify as saying the woman was Leb anese, but used a Jordanian passport in the false name of May Elias Man sur. The agency did not give her real name. Maj. Gen. Hosni Farag, the Egyp tian Interior Ministry assistant for the Cairo airport, gave this account in Friday’s edition of the govern ment-run newspaper Al-Ahram: The woman completed pre boarding procedures later than the other passengers, and both airport and TWA security inspected her bags. She was a given a thorough body search and the airline security director took her to the plane in a company car for luggage identifica tion before she boarded. Farag did not say why the woman was delayed, subjected to a body See Search, page 8 Nicaraguan strike called retaliatory Army Reserve L.B.J. Elemen- 25 — American Le- — Bryan High — Bright Light _ — Peach Creek Community Center | • Precinct 29 — Brushy Commu- ticllty Center qqI I •Precinct 30 — Fellowship Hall I •Precinct 36 — V.F.W. Hall 3k Tri- See Elections, page 8 WASHINGTON (AP) — Last month’s incursion by the Nicara guan Army into Honduras was aimed partly at retaliating against Honduran authorities for having re leased weapons and other supplies to anti-Sandinista rebels, U.S. offi cials said Thursday. A senior intelligence official said that several weeks before the March 22 border crossing, the Hondurans released new assault rifles, rocket- propelled grenades and other sup plies to the Contras that the rebels had acquired from undisclosed for eign sources. The Hondurans “opened up the warehouses,” said the official, who asked not to be identified. The Contras need Honduran co operation to gain access to the sup plies sent to them. But Honduras, worried about provoking the Sandi- nistas, has often withheld the equip ment. for extended periods. The re bels receive non-lethal equipment from the United States and acquire weaponry from other sources, the identity of which neither U.S. nor Contra sources will discuss. The U.S. officials here, describing the administration’s assessment of Nicaragua’s reasons for moving into Honduras, said that in addition to providing the rebels with access to supplies, Honduras also has begun allowing the rebels to use inf iltration routes into Nicaragua in western Honduras. This area is far more strategic be cause it is closer to the densely pop ulated areas of Nicaragua than the remote eastern region, where the Contras had been given a freer hand to cross the border, they said. As described by the officials, the timing of the Nicaraguan incursion appeared to have little to do politi cally with the ongoing debate at the time in the U.S. Congress over whether to resume military aid to the Contras. Meanwhile, the White House dis puted statements, attributed to a se nior Honduran official, that the United States exaggerated the re cent border crossing and may have pressured Honduras into seeking U.S.aid. At a briefing for reporters in Santa Barbara, Calif., where Presi dent Reagan is vacationing, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said, “We have asked the government of Honduras for clarification.” Speakes was asked about an inter view, published in Thursday’s edi tions of The New York Times and The Miami Herald, quoting the offi cial as saying, “The United States’ in terest was that this situation have the connotation of an international inci dent. We had no interest in this.” The official, who the newspapers said asked not to be identified, said Honduras denounced the attack only after a senior American diplo mat pressed them for a more public reaction. He said the administration wanted such a statement to help it get money from Congress to arm re bels fighting Nicargua’s leftist gov ernment. Asked specifically about the inter view, Speakes said, “The allegations of U.S. pressure reportedly made by an unidentified Honduran official are not true. Those statements are a surprise to us. . . .” Reagan condemns bombing SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) — President Reagan on T hursday condemned the bomb ing of TWA flight 840 as a “bar baric, wanton act of international terrorism” and said no individual or group has been ruled out as the perpetrator. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Federal Aviation Administration experts in explo sives and security have arrived in Italy and Greece and are investi gating the in-flight bombing that killed four Americans. A group calling itself the Arab Revolutionary Cell claimed re sponsibility for planting the bomb that exploded aboard the plane over Greece, Speakes said, but no group has been ruled out as being responsible. Libyan leader Moammar Kha- dafy has denied involvement in the attack. Although the White House indicated from prelimi nary investigation that Libya did not appear to be involved, Speakes said the North African country has not definitely been ruled out. “We will not speculate on who may be responsible,” he said. “We have heard reports from Mr. Khadafy (denying involvement). We do not yet know who is re sponsible. His denials, by them selves, mean nothing.” Despite the attack, which killed four passengers and injured nine others, the United States is not is suing any international travelers’ advisories, Speakes said. The traveling public, he said, is aware of the dangers of terrorism in traveling abroad. The International Air Lines Passenger Association, which said it has 30,000 U.S. members, said Thursday it was advising Ameri cans not to travel in the Mediter ranean area unless necessary. Shuttle ds lot commission ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — With the en- 230i- Ijhusiastic concurrence of America’s most experienced astronauts, the Challenger ■mmission on Thursday recommended Hat an independent safety panel oversee ppace shuttle travel to end a “kind of Rus- aer " In roulette” in which NASA flies without [fixing problems. ■The safety panel, suggested by astronaut Henry Hartsfield, was instantly endorsed ° I commission chairman William P. Rogers, who said “all of us think there should be an heatfl independent safety panel of some kind.” lie commissioner said an astronaut should 0 unie | on the P anel - ■ The commission, at the mid-point of its iilddC' four-month life, heard four of America’s post experienced astronauts say they did jS tue n ot know or did not realize the seriousness ^ostef 0 ^ )OOSter rocket problems. They disagreed ' ai [ovei whether an escape mechanism should beadded to the shuttle. iThe astronauts’ ignorance about the rocket problems was another N example of a communications breakdown within the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Administra tion uncovered by the commission, which is trying to find the cause of the Jan. 28 explo sion that destroyed Challenger and killed its crew of seven, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe. Chief astronaut John Young said “The very biggest problem that must be solved before the space shuttle flies again is com munications. Unless we take very positive steps to open safety communications and to identify and fix, early on, safety problems, we’re asking for another shuttle accident,” Young said he personally favored estab lishing “an agency-wide flight safety organi zation similar to those of many airplane programs,” but added he would support any better safety mechanism the commis sion recommends. He added, “I wonder sometimes why, if the space shuttle is inherently risky, why we calls for neutral safety panel should accept additional avoidable risks in order to meet launch schedules, and we do that sometimes.” Arnold Aldrich, the shuttle program manager at the Johnson Space ^Center in Houston and a key official in deciding when to launch, said some communications breakdowns figured in the Challenger acci dent. One breakdown was that launch-eve con cerns about the booster rocket’s perfor mance in cold weather were not passed to him, and another that he was not told about extensive NASA reviews of the booster de sign last summer. After hearing Hartsfield describe the shuttle as “the most magnificent and fantas tic machine,” commission member Richard P. Feynman commented that it is also a risk) machine with flaws and difficulties. “i tried to Figure out where the difficulty is in this system that made it go wrong,” he said. “The problem is communication and that communication will be fixed if you have the safety panel, if there is a member of the astronauts on the safety panel, be cause then you’ll be fully aware of all the things that are unsafe.” • NASA practice, Feynman said, is to re view flight problems, agonize over them, and then decide to fly despite the problems. If nothing fails, he said, “it is suggested therefore that that risk is no longer so high. For the next flight, we can lower our stan dards a little bit, because we got away with it last time.” “An argument is always given that last time it worked,” said Feynman, a physicist who has won the Nobel Prize. “It’s a kind of Russian roulette. There was a risk, but you got away with it. But it shouldn’t be done over and over again. When I look at the re views, I find perpetual movement heading for trouble.” Hartsfield had said the astronauts want an independent safety observer in launch decisions, “somebody that’s not worried about programmatic issues or anything, but just thinking safety.” Although most astronauts have said they never heard of problems with O-ring seals on the shuttle’s booster rockets, astronaut Robert Crippen testified he had been told in a formal flight review in January 1985 that a leak was detected. Crippen was rep resenting all the astronauts in that review. “In truth, in my perception, it wasn’t that much of a big deal,” Crippen said, adding that he was not aware that a waiver had been issued which, in effect, acknowledged that catastrophe could result if the seal failed. “If I had been aware of the change,” he said, “I would have taken the problem much more seriously.”