Student Aggie Club gives endowment to health center — Page 3 A&M's Toney goes to Eagles, Williams selected by Jets — Page 9 Tl^exasASM — „ 1 tie Dattalion Vol.83 No. 145 USPS 075360 12 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, April 30, 1986 I n, iltl uclear reactor continues to burn Washington (ap) — u.s. in- dJuRgence sources reported that the irs diwrnobvl nuclear reactor complex me Soviet Ukraine experienced a ((down Saturday, was still billow- smoke Tuesday and threatened ither reactor at (he same site, rms control administrator Ken- |h Adelman, meanwhile, told igress (hat Soviet claims only two ths were preposterous and called incident “the most catastrophic leardisaster in history." |Erelated stories: • Soviets keeping quiet • Foreign aid requested • Experts call it a meltdown fr • U.S. set to monitor radiation de said temperatures reached as ;h as 7,232 degrees Fahrenheit at graphite-cooled reactor and Bed, “The graphite is burning and will continue to burn for a good number of days.” It was understood that much of the U.S. intelligence information was gathered by a spy satellite, but no officials confirmed this. A ranking administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that officials evaluating recent intelligence “don’t believe there was a nuclear explosion per se,” at Cher nobyl. “But there was clearly a melt down.” However, a group of physicists said they did not believe a meltdown was possible. Dr. William W. Havens Jr., executive secretary of the Ameri can Physical Society, said it would take temperatures of about 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit to melt the low- grade uranium oxide fuel. It would be hard to reach temperatures of even 3,000 degrees in a graphite car bon fire, he said. “There was no fuel meltdown,” said Allan Bromley, a physics profes sor at Yale. But he added, “As long as the Fire continues, there will be a continued release of radiation.” U.S. said to be safe from radiation As of early Tuesday morning, “smoke was still billowing from the site. The roof had been blown off See Meltdown, page 12 By Brian Pearson Senior Staff Writer The drifting radiation cloud caused by the possible meltdown at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Soviet Ukraine will not pose a health problem for the United States, said Donald Feltz, director of the Texas A&M Nuclear Sciences Center. Feltz said the slight increase in ra diation levels caused by the cloud might be detected in the United States within a week. “It’s not going to be a threat, but scientists (in the United States) will be able to detect it,” Feltz said. He said that although Finland, Denmark and Sweden, which are about 800 miles away from the dam aged reactor, have experienced an increase in radiation levels, the in creases are not dangerous. He added that natural levels of ra .3». J? r? * Vote, for 'four Worife Le^S diation in other spots around the world exceed the increased levels de tected in the Scandinavian countries. The people in the most serious danger of radiation poisoning, F’eltz said, are those within one to two miles of the reactor. He said the accident would not have been as severe if the reactor had employed better containment facilities. “The experts are considering that they’re suffering a meltdown,” he said. “The real emphasis has been placed on the fact that the Russian nuclear program does require the installation of a containment facility that could control a radiation release of this magnitude. “That’s basically their whole prob lem. This (Chernobyl) reactor has no containment. When the accident oc curred, the radiation went right out of there.” Feltz said an adequate con tainment facility would include a confinement building, such as ones required for reactors in the United States, which would prevent most of the radiation from escaping the plant. The nuclear accident, Feltz said, probably was caused by a failure within the reactor cooling system. The loss of cooling, he said, allowed the nuclear fuel to reach tempera tures in excess of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, causing it to melt through the metal fuel containers called “clads.” If the clads fail, the fission fuel products, such as radio active gases, can be released to (he surrounding area. Feltz said release does not cause an explosion, but does cause a cloud of radioactive gas. “All that came out of this one was a big puff of radiation,” he said. Reagan begins Indonesian visit . 'omrA f>y; m v To^e -u&ewci '* *0 €• * * . m ttsWMP |7"" ' . • . t Y eatf ; The Polls Are Open Students cast their votes Tuesday for their favorite pair of legs at the Mosher Hall Leggs Contest table by Rudder Fountain. The contest Photo by Anthony S. Casper supports the Christian Children’s Fund and voting will continue through Thursday. 90,000 expected at Memorial Stadium FarmAid II set for July 4 in Austin AUSTIN (AP) — Country music :arWillie Nelson said Tuesday that armAid II in Memorial Stadium, :heduled for July 4, has no mone- iry goals but could he more success- jlthat FarmAid I, which raised ap proximately $9 million. I FarmAid I was held Sept. 22 on the University of Illinois campus at jhampaign, Ill. Nelson appeared with Texas Ag- Iculture Commissioner Jim High- Vver at a news conference at Me morial Stadium on the University of Texas campus. Asked what the goal of the Farm- Aid II concert was, Nelson said, “We have no goals money-wise — $100 billion would be nice but we!I take anything up to that.” Nelson said a crowd of nearly 90,000 is expected for the concert. Hightower said Nelson “is not only a superstar in the music world but the last couple of years we have found him to be a true friend of the family farmers and ranchers of this country.” Hightower said University of Texas regents and legal officials had agreed in principle to allowing use of the stadium, and the state agricul ture department would be the offi cial state sponsor of the program. Nelson traditionally has July 4 concerts in Texas, and Hightower said, “There were other states vying for this (FarmAid). Mississippi wanted to have it, Nebraska wanted BALI, Indonesia (AP) — Presi dent Reagan, bearing a “message of freedom” for Asian allies, arrived to a lush welcome in the Orient on Tuesday, but Indonesian authorities promptly expelled two Australian journalists in Reagan’s entourage. A third reporter, Barbara Cross- ette of The New York Times, who had come on her own, was also or dered out of the country, allegedly because she had written stories crit ical of Indonesian President Su harto. Richard Palfreyman and James Middleton, Washington-based cor respondents for the Australian Broadcasting Corp., were ordered off the press plane accompanying Reagan, detained briefly in the air port terminal here, then told to leave the country on the next plane to To kyo. Suharto banned all Australian journalists after a Sydney newspaper published an article alleging corrup tion in his government. Reagan and his wife Nancy were greeted by Suharto and his wife Tien and led down a red-carpeted receiving line as young girls in native costume tossed flowers in their path. Under extremely tight security, the Reagans were escorted through the large ornate stone Gates of Bali, the symbolic entry point to the is land. Hundreds evacuated in landmark library fire to have it but it belonged in Texas. “Having Willie Nelson on the Fourth of July in Mississippi is just as silly as moving the State Fair (of Texas) to Mississippi, and we thought it belonged right here.” Hightower was asked how the ar tificial turf in the stadium would be protected, and he said it would be covered by plywood and an “exotic material that doesn’t burn, doesn’t melt, doesn’t scorch and doesn’t al low anything bad to happen to it. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Fire tore through the landmark, 60-year-old downtown library Tuesday, con suming thousands of books, collaps ing parts of the building’s interior and forcing the evacuation of hun dreds of patrons and employees. At least 22 firefighters were in jured as more than 250 battled the blaze in the three-story building, which contains more than 2 million books, periodicals and photographs. Historic murals, photographs and U.S. patents were believed destroyed along with tens of thousands of vol umes, some of them rare and irre placeable. , The fire in the neo-classical build ing, which is listed on National Reg ister of Historical Places, started around 11 a.m. and continued to burn Tuesday evening. There were no reported injuries to the public or employees. Fire Chief Donald Manning called the blaze “very treacherous — the worst fire to contain I’ve seen in my 31 years” as a firefighter. The cause of the fire was not im mediately known, city fire Inspector Ed Reed said. Councilman Gilbert Lindsay, who went to the scene, said the library would probably have to be rebuilt. Flames started in the sixth tier of the building’s eight-tier central book stacks and pushed their way into the attic. Tier six corresponds with the second floor. The fire began before 11 a.m. and part of the third floor collapsed about two hours later. Town Hall to try promoter-oriented shows By Jeanne Isenberg Staff Writer Concerts and Broadw'ay shows saw some Bimdays at Texas A&M this year, but MSC Town Hall hopes to change that by bring- W promoters into the selection process for fext season’s concerts and shows. Jim Hurd, Town Hall’s faculty adviser, aid 1985-86 was the w'orst year financially lor the committee. The projected deficit of necommittee for 1986 is about $61,000, he Hurd attributes the loss to several fac- |tors. On the concert scene, he says the two aajor moneylosers were the two country- fwestern acts which came to A&M in Feb- Jary. “Lee Greenwood and the American Mu sic Tour are the two that really put us out of business,” Hurd says. “We’re still not sure why both failed, but we relearned a lesson of three years ago — don’t book another show until the one you’re working on is over with.” On the Town Hall/Broadway front, the problem wasn’t losses from a show, Hurd says, but rather from a drop in season ticket sales. With a major production such as 42nd Street this year, he says prices of sea son tickets rose. Next season, Town Hall won’t be bring ing any large scale musicals that could in flate the price for the tickets, he says, but in stead is bringing a wider variety of shows such as Jesus Christ Superstar, Romeo and Juliet and Of Mice and Men. Hurd says Town Hall is hoping to try a new approach to programming next year. While the committee historically has gone on its own to the acts it wanted, it is now gearing toward promoter-oriented shows. In this circumstance, he says a major pro moter pays for the privilege of coming in and doing a show. The advantage is that the promoter takes the risk, he says, but if the show does well, the promoter takes most of the profit. If Town Hall can establish good relationships with promoters, Hurd says it may be able to rebuild its reserves and its reputation with the market by getting peo ple interested in local concerts. Hurd says that with the lack of diversity in entertainment in College Station, Town Hall will work next year to expose the A&M community to a wider diversity of enter tainment and to help in the development of new, lesser-known artists instead of restrict ing programs to the big-name concerts. “This (community) is a hotbed of up- and-coming talent and we want to provide a venue for that talent,” he says. James Randolph, senior associate direc tor of the MSC and'adviser of Town Hall from 1973-80, says another problem the committee has had to face is a radical change in the market for concerts. Artists have moved into a “bigger is bet ter” mode, Randolph says, and A&M just can’t afford to bring a lot of them here. Aside from artist fees, Town Hall also would have to pay for technical costs such as lighting and staging. “Given the facilities available and the en vironment in which we function, the big- name concert is a thing of the past,” Ran dolph says. Fie also says artists no longer need cities such as College Station or places like A&M. While artists used to be anxious to play con cert dates everywhere to promote their re cords, they can accomplish more now by broadcasting on channels such as Music Television instead of going on tour. Hurd says Town Hall had talked to John Cougar Mellencamp, whose asking price was $75,000. That figure didn’t include the band, promotional or technical costs, Hurd says. “The most expensive show we’ve done to my knowledge was $35,000,” he says. “Bob Hope was $50,000, but he wasn’t a concert and there were no extra fees (band or tech nical). “Town Hall used to bring the up-and- coming acts for $ 10,000-$ 15,000. They’re just not out there anymore. The prices are more than our market is willing to sup port.”