able svfify a m. - 4pm Texas A&MW^ m m m • The Battalion Vol. 87 Mo. 37 CISPS 045360 12 pages —— n . College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 21,1987 ir Force jet crashes into hotel, kills nine ■NDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Air Force jet lost power short of a run way at the Indianapolis Interna- ippal Airport Tuesday, clipped a bant building and exploded in a fireball into a crowded seven-story hotel, killing at least nine people, ^■'he dead were found in the lobby and first-floor meeting rooms of the Ramada Inn Airport hotel, where A7-D Corsair came to rest. The accident occurred at 9:15 a.m. and ■fighters — some of who saw the Bh — were on the scene within two minutes. ■he pilot, identified as Maj. Bruce ■Teagarden, 35, of Las Vegas, Nev.. ejected at about 800 feet. Mayor William Hudnut said. Tea- garden was treated and released at Methodist Hospital. Witness John Mentzer said, “The only thing I saw was devastation. If anyone was in the lobby area they are gone. It was like a napalm bomb. The heat, the flames. It collapsed the whole front of the building.” Fire Capt. Gary Campbell said the bodies were charred beyond recog nition. At least five will have to be identified using dental records. Medical stenographer Pat Alexan der of the Marion County coroner’s office said, “We have bodies and we have names, but we’re still trying to match them.” Authorities conducted a room-to- room search after fires were put out for additional dead and injured. But because many hotel records were de stroyed in the fire, officials did not know Tuesday night how many peo ple were missing. At Ramada Inn headquarters in Phoenix, Ariz., spokesman Dave Thompson said there were 155 rooms in the hotel and 105 regis tered guests. “About half of those had checked out before the crash oc curred,” he said. However, other people could have been in the hotel for other rea sons, officials said. The pilot was about 15 miles south of Indianapolis when his en gine failed and he could not restart it, authorities said. arket’s increase fails erase record plunge st Oak M I JEW YORK (AP) — I he Dow I Js industrial average bounced I K 102 points Tuesday, but its big- esl point rise ever on its busiest day n history erased only one-fifth of j^Bprevious day’s Depression-sized majket crash. r^Both the I okyo and London stock excn.mges posted their biggest losses ge Station See related stories, Pages 4, 6,12 I Tuesday. Worldwide, stocks ell over $1 trillion in a 24-hour id. Declining stocks outnumbered ad- ing ones by more than 5 to 2 in fy, panicky trading in the er New York Stock Exchange, s managed to regain $60 billion e $503 billion they lost in Mon rout. le Dow Jones average of 30 in- ial stocks rose 102.27 points—a fay record — to 1,841.01, ding to a preliminary reading, having fallen a record 508 its on Monday. ^^ne volume of tt ading — a good measure of the market’s confusion ^ soared to overall high of 608.12 million shares, eclipsing Monday’s record-shattering 604.33 million- share day. “There is still a certain amount of sensitivity and nervousness in the market,” John Phelan, the chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, said at a news conference. Losses continued on the Ameri can Stock Exchange and in the over- the-counter market. Investors floundered helplessly between optimism over a big drop in interest rates and pessimism over the chance of a recession — possibly triggered by the stock market’s plunge itself. The evaporation of paper wealth threatened to undermine the confi dence of consumers, leading to re duced spending and higher saving. Those virtues, if overdone, could wipe out the demand for goods and services that keeps the economy growing. Reagan says market crash shouldn't lead to recession WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan, buoyed by the partial recovery of the stock market, de clared Tuesday, “There is nothing that has happened here that should result in a recession. “Economic fundamentals in this country remain sound and our citi zens should not panic.” Reagan spoke after a meeting with Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan and Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III to discuss the chaos gripping the stock market af ter Monday’s record 508-point drop. The Dow Jones industrial average regained some of its historic loss, ris ing 102 points on Tuesday. The president noted that he signed an order Tuesday imple menting the automatic spending cuts under the Gramm-Rudman deficit-reduction law. ' dp Footloose Bill Sparks, a senior English major, kicks off his shoes and enjoys the cool weather on the west side Photo by Robert Rizzo of the Academic Building while waiting for his logic class to start. confronts lack of child-care facilities bar. By Kristin Czarnik Reporter Ajcommittee for on-campus day care is icing formed to confront the lack of child- arelacilities at Texas A&M. committee, composed of faculty, toff, students and possibly departmental «pi|sentatives, plans to deal with this 'roblcm, which has been under consider- tion since 1974. Ra< hel Kennedy, founder of the A&M itudents with Children program, said the ommittee would like to see an on-campus day-care service started for the benefit of student parents. However, Kennedy said this would require the help of various orga nizations and the campus administration. “The administration wants to know what people expect from the day care, how much they expect to pay, who to expect to staff it and what kind of programs they want to see in it,” Kennedy said. Joan Penzenstadler, president of the Married Student Apartment Council, be lieves the University must consider an on- campus day-care program if it wants to at tract top graduate students and faculty. “You can’t expect faculty and high-level graduate students who are married with children to come here without looking at this kind of thing,” Penzenstadler said. Jinsoon Sagong, whose husband is an A&M graduate student, feels larger schools, such as A&M, should have an ad equate child-care program. “Usually, on this size of campus they have a good nursery or at least a preschool program,” Sagong said. Smaller universi ties, such as North Texas State University and Texas Tech University, have excellent child-care programs for student parents, Sagong said. According to an article in Texas College Student magazine, the insufficient campus child-care program is not only a problem at A&M, but also a problem on other cam puses nationwide. Only 40 percent of the nation’s universi ties and colleges provide some type of day care, the article says, and that includes cam puses that merely refer people to off-cam pus facilities. In addition to the convenience on-cam pus day care offers, the article says, the cost can be less than off-campus facilities be cause some academic departments charge mandatory student fees to support the cen ters. Some campuses have laboratory schools available where students in the depart ments of education or educational psychol ogy can work directly with the children. “Laboratory schools,” Kennedy said, “have more of an educational-developmen tal slant to their day-care program rather than just baby-sitting.” Iranian leaders vow "rESTtifC > strike back at U.S. r raid on platforms , stating the ows: The 95 W 15 hJhSw* MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) * ^Q2hoursty* 1 ’ r an will strike back and “make n0 ^ the! S. regret” the Navy shelling Ihat destroyed two oil platforms n iCenter,S n P e Persian Gulf, Iranian lead- ytl# nly e). your willbepr 0 ^ , SS eil),v erssaid Tuesday. iry eltgih®y c vi n g). Bff'me Minister Hussein Mu- jmaket^ avi said “compromise is impossi- >le’ and “we w ill retaliate” for the transenp' 1 D.S. attack, Iran’s official news *gen< y reported. Musavi was Quoted as saying that “after we fellour reprisal blory, we will call ntWrfHT 8 /’ ,rt0the anflht^Lr i Shen " Rafsanjani, speaker bytheend 0 ' 1 BTpe Iranian Parliament and t^Rpf 1 ran's most powerful lead- geatA&h' ' trs, said his vow of retaliation was not|a threat, but a reality.” a ll’g 7 scm cs 12th U.S.-escorted convoy not be ' n ^ ^pt.K'ptont Tuesday, one day after the : eiving a lr ' in irtiljery attack on the Iranian ued^latfornis. south from ntot^moving ie courses on t j ie 550-mile voyage 1 iranSCn «ur,i>' FT the (mlf . e eval '' aie (iker r Itjincluded two reflagged Ku- t: an order (;an j cers — t o e 80,000-ton ,m,hC nrogrr- ^ cean City and the 46,000-ton hours*rtP . j as Ring — and the guided-mis- 29> 1 'into: lie frigate USS Ford, Pentagon re*" 1 ** 5 iffici ,!s said. t comet 1 ! ,, An Iranian shuttle tanker re- r border, ytoitld sighting a mine in a busy channel 40 miles off Iran’s coast, shipping executives said. They did not say if any action was taken. Sources in Kuwait said eight to 10 artillery rounds exploded at Umm al-Aish, a Kuwaiti oil-dril ling camp near the Iraqi border. Kuwait’s Defense Ministry con firmed that artillery shells fell in the area but said there were no casualties or damage. The Kuwait news agency quoted a ministry spokesman as saying the shells apparently were fired “during ar tillery duels between Iran and Iraq,” which have been at war seven years. The warfront is about 25 miles away. Gulf shipping executives, speaking on condition of ano nymity, said commercial traffic in the waterway appeared normal after the U.S. attack on Iranian oil-rig platforms Monday. Shells demolished the two plat forms in an 85-minute bombard ment. The 25-30 Iranians on the platforms were given time to evacuate first. Iran’s oil minister said the attack caused about $500 million in damage. Litter in B-CS decreases 73 percent thanks to Texas' anti-litter campaign By Clark Miller Staff Writer Litter in the Bryan-College Sta tion area is down 73 percent since 1983, and litter has decreased 54 percent statewide since 1985, the di rector of a local litter-control organi zation said. Bryan’s overall litter decrease is 83 percent while College Station’s is 63 percent from 1983, compared to the statewide decrease, Diane Mills, coordinator of Brazos Beautiful Inc., said. College Station didn’t fare as well as Bryan because of timing, Mills said. The litter survey was^takenjn Au gust, when more than 30,000 Texas A&M students were moving to the College Station area with boxes of belongings. Trash dumpsters — overflowing from boxes and other moving-related trash — accounted for much of the city’s litter. The litter is measured by a photo metric index taken every six months by Bryan and College Station city of ficials. The officials take photo graphs of litter sites, including curbs, areas around dumpsters, va cant lots, gutters and parking lots. The photographs are taken at random locations around the cities but always at the same height from the ground and the same distance from the curb, in accordance with standards set by the Keep America Beautiful program, Mills said. The photographs then are placed under a transparent grid and- the amount of trash is counted, she said. Mills credits most of the im provement to the statewide “Don’t Mess With Texas” and Adopt-a- Highway anti-litter campaigns. The state’s litter decline was mea sured by a non-profit organization, the Institute for Applied Research, from Sacramento, Calif., under the direction of Don Syrek. Syrek said Texas has one of the best anti-litter campaigns in the United States. “Texas has made more progress in reducing litter in a shorter time and with less expense than any other state,” Syrek said. The “Don’t Mess With Texas” television advertising campaign is unique, for example, because it is broadcast during prime viewing hours and is targeted toward the group that does the most littering, he said. Karen LeFevre, a public informa tion officer for the Texas highway department, agrees with Syrek, say ing the “Don’t Mess With Texas” campaign is directed at “bubba’s” — the 18- to 34-year-old males who, IAR research has shown, have a ten dency to litter. Since the program started, Syrek said, 66 percent fewer discarded beer and soft drink cans plague Texas roadsides. Washington is the only state cleaner than Texas, Syrek said, but Washington has had an extensive lit ter-control program since 1977 while Texas started its program in 1985. However, Texas is reducing litter by 23.5 percent each year while Washington is reducing litter by only 5.4 percent a year, Syrek said, al though Texas spends only 18 cents per person annually on the cam paign, compared to Washington’s expenditure of 49 cents per person. Texas’ success is a combination of four factors, he said. First, the Adopt-a-Highway pro gram is used more in Texas than any other state, he said. More than 4,700 miles of Texas highways, about 6 percent, have been adopted by groups that clear trash from the ditches along a two-mile strip of highway. Stretches of highway that haven’t been adopted are also cleaner be cause people are more conscious that their neighbors are trying to keep roads clean, he said. Second, Syrek said, the “Don’t Mess With Texas” slogan has been very effective. He’s even seen the slogan on T-shirts and bumper stick ers in California. The campaign doesn’t ask people not to litter, but it tells them not to, he said. “There isn’t some cute owl telling them not to pollute,” he said. Instead, Ed “Too Tall” Jones and Randy White of the Dallas Cowboys demand that people stop littering, he said. This tactic has much more impact on the people who litter than a pleading cartoon character does. Third, he said, the “Don’t Mess With Texas” slogan is seen every eight miles on the back of signs along state highways. People see the slogan so much that it reinforces the television commercials and other ad vertising. Syrek said other states post signs, but they usually are posted once every 200 miles. Other states also are looking at Texas as a role model for their own litter-control programs, but many state agencies aren’t willing to spend the $2 million a year Texas has spent on its advertising campaign, he said.