A&M students may register Soviets angry over charges Aggies grab share of SWC for classes by telephone of withholding information baseball title with Longhorns — Page 3 — Page 5 — Page 7 mmmmmmmsmmmm Texas A&M ^ The Battalion Serving the University community 'ol 83 No. 148 USPS 075360 10 pages College Station, Texas Monday, May 5, 1986 rof says fire at A&M could have killed thousands By Mark Taylor Reporter and Scott Sutherland Assistant (.'it} Editor H fire that sent smoke billowing ^Htigh the Chemist i y Building on 16 could have killed thousands Elad it ignited and exploded some ^^■mous cyanide powder stored in Ktldjacent storeroom, said Dr. Rod PCionnor, prolessor of chemistry. were lucky,” he said. “It iuti 1 have been a catastrophe of pdajor proportions." But Ron Carter, chemistry busi ness office manager, said O’Connor “was making a big deal about no thing." He said there had not even been a fire, just a dust fallout from the chemical reaction of the phoso- phorus being exposed to air. The incident occurred when a stock clerk dropped a jar containing about f ive pounds of white phospho rus sticks on concrete stairs just in side the main entrance to the old Chemistry Building. O'Connor said the white phos phorus, the same chemical used in phosphorus grenades, came very near to exploding a storeroom full of explosive chemicals and poison ous cyanide powder that could have killed many students and faculty. White phosphorus is “pyropho ric," which means it ignites when it comes in contact with air, O'Connor said. “As a safety measure, white phos phorus is usually carried in a double container so if the first container breaks, the second one will remain intact,” he said. O’Connor arrived on the scene before the phosphorus ignited, but while waiting for someone to get a bucket of water the sticks caught fire, according to a report sent by O'Connor to Dr. Donald Sawyer, chemistry department head. In the report, O’Connor said he sounded the alarm, sent a stockroom worker to notify the fire department and began looking for an air-breath ing apparatus so he could extinguish the fire. However the only available air- breathing apparatus was on the op posite side of the stockroom and the smoke f rom the fire made the appa ratus inaccessible, O’Connor said. He said that in the stockroom - ■ i-t; W gg «.'C iigii® i 1 r*Nr nr Wl- V ' HHiIgggjgggig 4^' ' ■. ■ H«1 S>.'» 4 Snakes Alive , UPPi ■ ■ Photo b\ Grot; Bui lev (George Lewis shows Raphael, a 6-foot-long snake, at a pet show at Bivan High School Sunday. Raphaeil took second place in the “Big gest Pet" category in the show, which was held by Texas A&M first- vear veterinary medicine students. — |CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The de- ruction of an unmanned Delta rocket shortly Iter liftof f could halt all U.S. rocket launches for jjonths as investigators analyze the third disas- ous attempt to reach space this year, officials lid Sunday. Richard H. Truly, NASA’s associate adminis- ator for space flight, appointed a board to ex- mine the loss of the three-stage, $30 million •elta rocket and a $57.-5 million storm-tracking ttellite aboard. Delta had been NASA’s most used and spendable launcher, but on Saturday the rock- t’s main engine shut down little more than a linlite after take-of f. The rocket w'as destroyed om the ground after it tumbled out of control ve| the Atlantic Ocean. The rocket’s loss came after the )an. 28 explo- E sion of the space shuttle Challenger and an April 18 blast that destroyed an Air Force Titan 34D rocket. NASA’s director of expendable vehicles, Charles Gay, said it w'as too early to tell what im pact Saturday’s failure would have on future Delta flights. The storm-tracking GOES orbiters — Geosta- tionary Operational Environmental Satellite — are vital to U.S. weather-monitoring capabilities since only one is in orbit and its five-year life cy cle is almost up, said Gerald Longanecker, man ager of NASA’s meteorological satellite program. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad ministration paid NASA $42.5 million to launch the GOES-7. It was to have permanently orbited the equator 22,300 miles dver Columbia, and would have been used to detect storms brewing in the Caribbean and lower Atlantic. NASA’s Delta project manager, Bill Russell, said the rocket’s main engine stopped operating 71 seconds after the 6:18 p.m. liftoff. When the main engine shut down, the vehicle began careening violently for another 12 seconds or so, he said. At 91 seconds, a range safety officer detonated explosives aboard by radio command to destroy the rocket. The launch had been postponed from Thurs day, when leaking fuel was discovered in the rocket’s main engine. Engineers reported no sign of this problem Saturday, and Russell said a fuel leak was not the cause of the engine shutdown. Clements, White face lovember rematch ■ DALLAS (AP) — Texas pn- nrin voters set tip a November bout between Gov. Mark White iiid the man he knocked out of office, ousted an 18-year Su- pieme Court justice and over- tjhelmingly rejected candidates Inikecl to political extremist Lyn don LaRouche. ■ But nine nominations for statewide office still must be de cided in June 7 runoff elections. I Former Gov. Bill Clements, tlue to pre-election polls, gar nered nearlv 60 percent of the Republican vote Saturday against rials Kent Hance and Tom Hieffler and will gel his chance in November to avenge his upset llss to White four \ ears ago. ■ White had a tougher time Sat- tfjdav, but got nearlv 54 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff in his bid fora second four-year term as ; the state’s chief executive. ■ Republicans face runoff elec tions for nominations foi lieuten ant governor, attorney general, railroad commission and two seats on the Supreme Court. Democrats will compete in run offs for nominations for the Rail road Commission and three Su preme Court seats. Incumbents fared well, with the exception of Supreme Court Justice Sears McGee, who ran third in the Democratic primary and missed a runoff. Fellow Justice Robert Camp bell failed to win his party’s nomi nation outright and will battle in a runoff against appeals court jus tice Jim Brady of Austin. The success of LaRouche sup porters in Illinois earlier this year failed to spread to Texas. The lone LaRouche candidate for statewide office lost resoundingly and 10 candidates for congressio nal nominations finished last. Two LaRouche backers had no Democratic opposition for nomi nations to congressional seats, but the Houston-area districts are considered safe for Republicans. See Primaries, page 10 Faculty seeks to better policy where the phosphorus is stored are shelves upon shelves of flammable liquids and explosive solids. The stockroom was no more than 10 feet from the scene of the acci dent, he said. "Had that clerk dropped the jar any sooner, the whole stockroom would have gone up in flames,” he said. “And adjacent to that stock- room is a solvent storeroom with huge drums of explosive chemicals.” Even though the fire was on the concrete stairs outside the store room, O’Gonnor said, it might have blown into the stockroom anyway. If it had blown into the stockroom, he said, “that whole side of the building might have gone up. “The only reason it didn’t is be cause when I left to go watch for the firemen I left the door in front of the fire open. That caused it to be sucked away from the stockroom.” Several people inhaled the poten tially harmful smoke generated by the fire, O’Connor said, but no one was injured. “However," he said, “if that fire had started in the stockroom itself See Fire, page 10 Terrorism tops priority list at allied summit Rocket failure may halt launches TOKYO (AP) — President Rea gan and six allied leaders weighed a , summit statement today calling for concerted action against terrorism, but allowing for nations to take uni lateral action when necessary. They met as Japanese authorities investi gated the misfiring of homemade missiles by anti-summit saboteurs. During their first meetings to gether, the T2th economic summit was dominated by non-economic concerns — terrorism and nuclear safety. Aides drafted and agreed on a terrorism statement, said Reagan spokesman Larry Speakes. Such a statement was no foregone conclu sion considering the opposition some European leaders expressed after last month’s U.S. raid into Li bya. Another summit statement, concerning the Soviet handling of the Cherbonyl nuclear accident last week, was in the draft stage at the Akasaka Palace. Aides worked overnight on the terrorism and nuclear statements as the leaders began their first full day of the 12th summit of western indus trial nations. Concerning the terrorism statement, Speakes said, “I think the tone would be . . . addressing the is sue of terrorism in a very direct manner. It would give the opportu nity for the allies to work in a con certed manner to combat terorrism and at the same time it would not preclude unilateral action to co- mabat terrorism, so it’s a balanced statement, it’s a good approach. On the nuclear safety issue, Speakes said Sunday that the leaders agreed safety procedures should be strengthened and accident reporting procedures should be improved. Senate ‘Iona overdue’ Editor's note: In this, the first of a three-part series on Texas A&M’s Faculty Senate, the senate's history and accomplishments are explored. By Sondra Pickard Stall Writer In 1957 when Texas A&M faculty members took the idea of a Faculty Senate to University President Earl Rudder, he vetoed the idea, saying he received orders from the A&M Board of Regents and the faculty would receive orders from him. In May 1983 the Faculty Senate held its first meeting, 25 years after it was first envisioned. In his first address to the newly created group, Dr. Gordon Eaton, provost and vice president for aca demic affairs, and an ex-officio member of the senate, admitted the senate was long overdue. "Given the University's 107 years of existence, you’re late — we're all late," Eaton said. “I would judge we are at least an entire generation late, and probably more than that.” The senate was set up to recom mend policy — not to make it. Its official functions encompass three major areas: policy, advisory and rhetorical. It’s empowered to suggest all policies dealing with cur ricula and teaching, academic stan dards, scholarships, honors, hiring, tenure, promotion and faculty eval uation. The senate mav give advice on subjects ranging from overall educa tional policy and planning to the ap pointment of administrators. Although still in its infancy, the senate’s last three years have proven that the body is clearly a benefit to any major university. The senate's first year was spent creating the eight major committees and numerous subcommittees that now exist. But that wasn't all that was done in the senate’s initial year. As a result of senate action, stu dents can now receive a degree in speech communication. It also helped establish the Department of Speech Communication and Theatre Arts. A committee was set up to review University-wide curriculum require ments — a committee subsequently named the Core Curriculum Com mittee and one which recently com pleted action on a proposal which will broaden the education of A&M undergraduate students. Once the administration gives fi nal approval to the core curriculum, all students will have to take courses in computer science, a foreign lan guage, speech and writing, math or philosophy, science, cultural heri tage, social science, and technology and renewable resources before they can graduate from A&M. Beginning in Spring 1988, all stu dents will take a 51-hour mandatory core of courses including the state required core of history, political sci ence and physical education. The development of a core curric ulum is the most significant senate accomplishment yet. See Faculty, page 10 Several hours before Reagan gathered for dinner with the other leaders Sunday, several projectiles were launched in the direction of the State Guest House. Police said five missiles were fired from an apartment building about 1 'A miles north of the guest house. Fragments of the projectiles were found around the Ganadian Em bassy, about 700 yards south of the palace building where Nakasone welcomed Reagan and other West ern leaders. Asked if he w'as upset by the inci dent, Reagan replied, “No, they missed.” Waldheim in June runoff for Austrian presidency VIENNA, Austria (AP) —Kurt Waldheim, the former U.N. sec retary general who has been dogged by claims he hid his Nazi past, received the most vot6s Sun day but fell just short of the abso lute majority necessary to win Austria’s presidency. A runoff election will be held June 8 between Waldheim, 67, the candidate of the conservative People’s Party, and Kurt Steyrer, the candidate of the socialists w'ho head the governing coalition. Interior Minister Karl Blecha announced the results, which were based on 100 percent of the voting districts reporting but de scribed as unoff icial. Waldheim received 2,343,387 votes, or 49.64 percent, and Steyrer had 2,061,162 votes, or 43.7 percent. Two other candi dates won 6.7 percent of the vote. After the results were an nounced, Waldheim said he ex pected the controversy over his Nazi past to die down during the next five weeks, although at tempts would probably be made to interfere in the election cam- paign. “But do not forget these inter ventions have come from private organizations and not from gov ernments,” Waldheim said, ap parently referring to allegations made against him in recent weeks by the World Jewish Gongress. The World Jewish Gongress had accused Waldheim of hiding his membership in Nazi youth groups before World War II and of concealing his wartime service in a German unit that committed atrocities in the Balkans. Waldheim said he served in the unit, but has continually denied that he was a Nazi or took part in massacres of partisans or civil ians.