5 115 5 Nheels." jps, Vans mthly Rales The Battalion 12 No. 206 GSPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, September 11, 1986 Tjlajority of video yearbook staffers resign ants. By Rodney Rather 1 -B Staff Writer a t0 yOUr| ma j orit y Qf the staff of the vi- T1 P T11 \\ ffl ar ^ 00 ^ ^ ias resigned because II C II l, >|fB r j es 0 j- on g 0 i n g conflicts with rl woi f' H’ ona * Broadcasting Services, tl ScICCtlO:)rding to a resignation letter sub- ■ Friday to President Frank E. (diver. ther the video yearbook pro- 1 be continued is at this time in, Donald C. Johnson, Stu- lublications coordinator, said. Student Publications, which lly had announced the pro- ■t prere^istration time last ■ is studying possible options, ha is uncertain what EBS might to do, even without Student Btipns involvement. Hn asked if his department Hake on the task of taping the Hearbook, Dr. Mel Chastain, Hrector, said he was optimistic He yearbook would continue Hhe auspices of Student Publi- Shop )rary nurser ohi on said he wants to be sure if Hject is dissolved, or is contin- H another form, that students who already have paid for their tapes will be given the option of re funds, but the exact procedure has not yet been determined. Ricky Telg, who last April had been nominated by the Student Pub lications Board, and approved by then-Provost Gordon Eaton as pro ducer of Video Aggieland, was one of those who resigned. He said the biggest problem for the video year book staff was that it was supplied poor equipment from EBS. Johnson said Student Publica tions’ original concept for the video project, which had been approved in March by A&M President Frank Vandiver, was that it would be a stu dent-run operation using new equipment bought by Student Publi cations specifically for the project. After it was discovered Vandiver in June 1985 already had authorized EBS to produce a video yearbook, the president decided he wanted the project to continue and urged Stu dent Publications and EBS to work out an arrangement using EBS equipment, under student direction, with Student Publications adminis tering the project. Vandiver could not be reached Wednesday for comment. Chastain said he had not been aware the Video Aggieland staff was having problems. EBS operates KAMU-TV and is a broadcast pro duction arm of Texas A&M. “No students had come to me and said, ‘We’re having difficulties,’ ” Chastain said. “I heard that some notes had been written by students saying that they had some problems, but no student ever came to me or indicated that things were so bad they were all getting ready to quit.” Telg said Student Publications could have bought new equipment for the video yearbook for about $20,000. Telg said negotiations to work out a compromise between EBS and Stu dent Publications started in June but didn’t end until late August. Chastain said before an agreement could be reached, EBS had to know exactly what the stu dents wanted to do and how they planned to do it. Telg said one of the main issues in the negotiations involved the rental rate EBS should charge for video equipment. It was finally set at $30 per hour for mini-camera rentals, and other rates for other equipment which would be needed later. In ad dition, when taping local events, Stu dent Publications was to be required to pay for the services of an EBS stu dent technician, who went with the equipment. Although it was originally be lieved that Video Aggieland would be a financially profitable venture for Student Publications, the rental situation made Video Aggieland a money-losing venture, Telg said. Johnson said projections given the Student Publications Board at the time of their approval of the project last spring indicated Video Year book probably would have broken even operationally within two years, with the cost of equipment pur chases probably being covered in three or four years. Johnson indi cated that under the new EBS ar rangement, the operational break even point was probably four or five years away. Andy Richardson, former asso ciate producer of Video Aggieland, another of those who resigned, said the rental arrangement did not work because the equipment given to the staff was old and faulty. “We felt the situation wasn’t going to get any better as far as getting any type of better equipment, and the rental situation just wasn’t very workable,” he said. Tapes of the first two events cov ered by Video Aggieland — Fish Camp and All-University Night — were not usable because of equip ment problems, he said. “I was there for Fish Camp and the videotape deck that the tape is housed in when it’s recording mal functioned somehow — and the way it was hooked up, we had no idea anything was wrong,” Richardson said. Both Chastain and Rodger Lewis, programming director of KAMU- TV, where EBS is located and the person assigned as liaison for the EBS project, said they weren’t sure if the problems were caused by equip ment malfunctions or by the stu dents’ lack of knowledge of the equipment. Chastain said, “I’m not sure whether it was ever determined whether or not the equipment didn’t work or the students just weren’t real familiar with how it works. “I’m not going to say it was brand new equipment, because it wasn’t, but it did work and provided accep table pictures prior to the time they took it out the first time.” Telg said the staff had a training session at KAMU-TV before they taped Fish Camp. He also had worked at Channel 3, KBTX-TV, for almost three years, and Richard son worked there for over two years, Telg said. Both have used portable cameras in their duties at the television sta tion, although Channel 3’s equip ment is different, he said. As agreed upon with Student Publications, EBS sent a student technician along with staff members on the one local shoot they made — All-University Night. Chastain said EBS had ordered some new equipment at a cost of $7,000 July 31 specifically intended for yearbook use but not all of it had arrived. Photo by Tom Ownbey Sean Peters, a senior physics major from Waupaca, nitrogen gas being vented from the tank he is [Wisconsin, and student worker for the Physics De- filling. T he liquid nitrogen being used to fill the partment, stands away from the minus 328-degree tank will be used to make liquid helium. raeli attack on arms depot si)0N, Lebanon (AP) — Israeli rplanes attacked a Palestinian mi depot Wednesday, killing three ilians and destroying more than shops in an industrial district on (■geofthis port city. Shortly before the raid an Israeli nioat intercepted a rubber ighv carrying Palestinian guerril- !or a mission to attack Israel, Is land Palestinian officials said. Hospitals said 13 other civilians were injured in the air raid, which began just after 6 a.in. It was Israel’s eighth air raid in Lebanon this year. Israeli officials said it was not linked to Saturday’s terrorist killing of 21 Jews in a syna gogue in Istanbul, Turkey, which Is rael has vowed to avenge. Turkish officials have said they do not know who was responsible for that attack but thought the two terrorists, who were blown up by their own gre nades, were Arabs. The Israeli command in Tel Aviv said the pilots who carried out the Si- don raid reported accurate hits on a warehouse used by the Popular Struggle Front to store weapons. But police and witnesses in Sidon said Israeli rockets missed the front’s two ammunition depots. A&M official: Spy case may be intentional ploy Soviets may try to cancel summit meeting with U.S. By Craig Renfro Staff Writer The filing of espionage charges against American reporter Nicholas Daniloff may be a ploy by the Soviet See related story, page 9 Union to cancel a year-end summit meeting between the two superpow ers, a Texas A&M official said Wednesday. Dr. Richard Thomas, director of the Center for Strategic Technology, said the Soviets don’t want to nego tiate arms control talks and by im prisoning Daniloff they hope to pro voke the Reagan administration into canceling the proposed summit. ' kills 3 Another guerrilla group, the Pal estine Liberation Front, issued a communique saying the raid came after four of its fighters tried to carry out a seaborne attack on the Is raeli coastal town of Nahariya. Both the Palestinians and Israelis said one of the four guerrillas was wounded during an exchange of gunfire at sea, and the Palestinians said he died later on shore. “If the business of ending the summit comes up they will hold Daniloff until the U.S. cancels,” Thomas said. Thomas, who was involved in a se ries of talks with the Soviets in April, said they are accusing the United States of trying to turn the detention of Daniloff into an excuse not to en gage in arms negotiations. “The Soviets would say, ‘We want peace, but the Americans won’t talk,’ ” Thomas said. Daniloff was arrested Aug. 30 af ter a Soviet acquaintance gave him a packet later found to contain secret maps and photographs. On Sunday, a military prosecutor charged Daniloff with espionage un der a law that imposes penalties ranging from seven years in prison to death. He has been held in Mos cow’s Lefortovo prison since he was grabbed by eight KGB agents in a Moscow park. Thomas said Daniloff was framed by the KGB in retaliation for the ar rest of Soviet United Nations em ployee Gennadiy Zakharov, who was arrested in New York Aug. 23. Thomas would not rule out the possibility of a prisoner exchange between the two nations. Thomas cited examples of Ameri can businessmen and government employees being confronted with charges of espionage while in the So viet Union. Most of the charges were Dr. Richard Thomas dropped, but the actions proved the powerful influence of the KGB, he said. “The KGB has much greater con trol than our CIA or FBI,” Thomas said. “KGB influence permeates the Soviet Union,” he said. “The average Russian is used to that type of gov ernment so they are disinclined to revolt.” Thomas said the KGB is similar to the SS secret police of Hitler’s Ger many. “They (the KGB) became so pow erful because they are a secret po lice,” he said. “They know about the skeletons in the closet and are in a position to blackmail to gain sup port.” Thomas said Soviet politics are strongly influenced by the KGB. The KGB’s political strength was so lidified when Yuri Andropov, for mer KGB chief, became general sec retary of the Soviet Union, he said. bp Lions Club official (idnapped in Beirut BURUT, Lebanon (AP) — The p official of the International Li ns Club for Lebanon and Jordan as kidnapped Wednesday in Mos- m west Beirut, one day after an merican educator was abducted on slay to play golf. ffilice said three men armed with enter-equipped pistols and riding a wine-colored BMW intercepted ons Club governor Victor Kenou 9:35 a.m. near the French Em- iSsy compound on Rue Clemen- :au. |f|vo of the assailants forced Ke- OU out of his white Mercedes-Benz at gunpoint and bundled him into their car, police said. Kenou, 50, heads the 39 Interna tional Lions Clubs in Lebanon and Jordan. A Syrian-born Christian, Kenou is a naturalized Lebanese citi zen who runs a prosperous import- export business in both the Moslem and Christian sectors of the Leb anese capital, according to police and family friends. Kenou’s abduction, like the kid napping of American educator Frank Herbert Reed on Tuesday, was an apparent challenge to Syria. 'Onvicted murderer ets stay of execution HUNTSVILLE (AP) — A federal dgeon Wednesday halted the exe- tion of a 26-year-old Houston an convicted of raping and rob- ng a woman and then killing her ■inning her over with her own r. Antonio Nathaniel Bonham, who fed execution early today, was nlcted in 1981 in the death of arie McGowen, 62, a teacher at ouston’s Massey Business College. Bonham would have been the nth Texas inmate to be executed is|ear and the 19th — tops in the nation — since the state resumed the death penalty in 1982. U.S. District Judge Ross Sterling issued the stay about nine hours be fore the scheduled lethal injection, The judge said in a brief written or der that he thought the request should have been denied. But Sterling said because the re quest came so close to the scheduled execution, he would allow more time for the trial record to be studied. Bonham’s attorney is seeking a new trial for Bonham. Shuttle commercial payloads to end Private firms will launch satellites WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan’s decision to force most commercial payloads off the space shuttle to a non-existent private U.S. launch industry is prompting communications satellite owners to consider France, China and even the Soviet Union for sending their cargoes aloft. The Aug. 15 White House announcement has thrown the satellite industry into confusion. Some satellite firms, with multi-million-dollar in vestments, will be favored with a shuttle launch; others will have to buy expensive rockets from American firms that won’t even have them for at least two years or will have to stand in line over seas. The government’s choices are to be made in a few weeks. Troy D. Ellington, GTE’s vice president for sa tellite programs, said, “We don’t know whether we are on the shuttle or off the shuttle for launch. We don’t know what the availability of commercial launchers is or will be.” When Challenger exploded Jan. 28, NASA had 44 commercial payloads under contract for future flights, mostly communications satellites. It had collected $190 million in advance pay ments and has made no refunds. The backlog was created by the two-year shut tle standdown and the priority which military cargoes will get when flight resumes. Only 15 commercial satellites will be launched from the shuttle through 1992. John E. Koehler, president of Hughes Com munications, Inc. which holds contracts to launch 10 commercial and one military communications satellite from the shuttle, said, “Had we had any hint that the government of the United States would seriously consider abrogating contracts entered in good faith, we wouldn’t have made those deals. For a country that paid its Revolu tionary War debt to walk away from contracts like this is a little distressing,” he said. Before the accident, commercial satellites were to be mixed on the shuttle with military and sci entific payloads. The flight rate was to rise to 24 a year and — because the shuttle was the country’s prime launch vehicle — no U.S. firm was man ufacturing rockets for private use. Initially, the redesigned shuttles will make only four flights a year. President Reagan promised that the private sector “with its ingenuity and cost effectiveness” would take over w'here NASA left off. But Otto Hoernig, vice president of American Satellite Company, said that just adds more uncertainty, because “I don’t think there is a large-enough commercial satellite base to support a commer cial expendable launch vehicle industry.” Charles D. Walker, a McDonnell Douglas engi neer who has flown in the shuttle three times with his company’s drug-purifying equipment, said the launch vehicle industry will find survival tough without government subsidy. “I’ve got to wonder how the federal govern ment thinks we are going to have a viable com mercial space transportation industry when the federal government has never made rail trans- portaion pay, when it took decades to begin to get the commercial airline business into a situa tion where it was paying,” he said. “I have to wonder what historical and economic basis we are operating on in these decisions.” Two major aerospace firms — Martin Mari etta, which built Titan rockets for the Air Force, and General Dynamics, manufacturer of Atlas and Atlas Centaur — say they’ll sell launch con tracts. McDonnell Douglas has not decided whether to enter the commercial market with its Delta rocket. “We are listening to everybody,” said Richard R. Colino, director general of Intelsat, a cooper ative of 110 countries, which is the world’s most frequent user of launch services. “We have made backup plans with the Ariane launch vehicle, which isn’t completely reassuring since they had two failures in their last four flights, including one of our satellites.” Arianespace, the private French-based com pany, recently signed a contract to launch an In dian government satellite. It was the fourth satel lite originally scheduled for shuttle launch to make other arrangements. Arianespace is booked until late 1990. Colino said Arianespace is taking advantage of U.S. delays to raise its prices at least 20 percent. China, trying to market its Long March rock ets, has had a delegation in the United States try ing to capture business. American Satellite’s Hoernig said, “I think it’s a regrettable situation where we in the United States are having to talk to foreign entities to ob tain an opportunity to launch.” iford, l nC