MMV Texas A&MW^ mm M + The Battalion Vol. 87 No. 145 USPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, May 2,1988 Down and dirty Richard Bowling, a junior electrical engineering major, tries to inter- game of football they played in the new mud — courtesy of the rainy cept an incomplete pass before his opponent can retrieve the ball in a weather — outside Hart Hall on Friday. IRA terrorists kill British soldiers in Netherlands NIEUWBERGEN, Netherlands (AP) — Three British soldiers were killed Sunday and three were in jured when Irish Republican Army terrorists sprayed one car with ma chine-gun fire and blew up another in separate attacks. The IRA claimed responsibility for both attacks in a statement deliv ered to media in Belfast, Northern Ireland. “We have a simple message for (Prime Minister Margaret) Thatcher — disengage from Ireland and there will be peace,” it said. “If not, there will be no haven for your military personnel and you will regularly be at airports awaiting your dead.” The car bomb tore apart a vehicle as it left the parking lot of a discothe que frequented by British troops in Nieuwbergen, a country town on the West German-Dutch border. Two of the three Royal Air Force men inside were killed immediately. The third was admitted to the in tensive-care ward of a local hospital. His condition was not known. “It was like a plane going through the sound barrier,” said Piet Hub- bers, who heard the blast from his home five miles away. Another witness said, “The car was already on fire. Twenty yards away, a boy (soldier) was lying all covered in blood.” Police spokesman Louis Steens said, “The bodies were in such con dition that they could not immedi ately be identified.” District Prosecutor Rolph Gon salves told reporters that an hour earlier, in the border community of Roermond about 30 miles away, gunmen opened fire on three Brit ish air force men who had just got ten into their car after leaving a cafe. They were fired on from close range, probably with automatic weapons, he said. Senior Aircraftsman Ian Shinner, 20, died at the scene. Another was in serious condition at a local hospital and a third was treated for minor shoulder injuries. The injured were not identified. They were the first IRA attacks in nearly 10 years in the Netherlands. Authorities have attributed the lack of violence to the nation’s apparent reputation as a haven for activists. British security forces are the main targets of the IRA, the mainly Roman Catholic guerrilla group fighting to end British rule in North ern Ireland and unite the predomi nantly Protestant province with the overwhelmingly Catholic Republic of Ireland. 1 dead, 1 injured as WWII plane crashes after air show CONROE (AP) — One man was killed and a second critically injured when a sin gle-engine plane crashed at Montgomery County Airport and burst into uncontrolla ble flames shortly after an air show took place at the field. The World War II vintage plane crashed about 5 p.m. Saturday, after the air show had ended. Fire trucks and other emer gency vehicles had left the airport only mo ments earlier, assuming that all planes were safely grounded. “If they would have been here a little longer, they might have been able to save them,” said Christopher Nemia, a member of the Confederate Air Force that took part in the air show. The dead man was identified as Carl Pickering, 28, of Conroe, a spokesman for Medical Hospital in Conroe said. Chad Dorsey, 23, the other occupant of the plane, was taken by Life Flight heli copter to Hermann Hospital in Houston, where he remained in critical condition Sunday with second- and third-degree burns, a hospital spokesman said. Witnesses said the men were both flight instructors at the airport. The two men were making a low-level pass over the air port when the left wing of the plane dipped and caused them to lose control of the plane. “The belly of the plane hit the runway and it kind of skidded to a stop,” Nemia said. Rescuers managed to pull the two men from the plane and attempted to extinguish the roaring blazes with fire extinguishers. Montgomery County Sheriffs Depart ment spokesman Bob Morrison said Picker ing had flown the plane during the air show and was on a pleasure flight with Dorsey when it crashed. Federal Aviation Administration officials were investigating the crash in an attempt to determine what had happened. 26 killed on bus in Sri Lanka as rebels set off explosives COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — A bus crowded with shoppers was blown apart Sunday, and at least 26 passengers were killed when Tamil rebels detonated explo sives buried in the ground, mili tary officials said. Thirty people were injured and 15 of them were in critical condition at local hospitals, the officials said. It was the second Tamil attack on a passenger bus in two days. The blast threw bodies into the dense jungle beside the road near the village of Sittaru, 25 miles southwest of the eastern port of Trincomalee. About 75 passen gers were aboard the bus and of ficials were searching for more victims. Most of the victims were Sinha lese, the majority ethnic group on the island, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The dead included two little boys, they said. On Saturday, Tamil militants ambushed a bus in the northern Vavuniya District, killing six Sri Lankan soldiers and five others. May Day marks ‘day of protest’ in Polish cities WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Police dashed with demonstrators Sunday in at least 15 cities as thousands of people heeded Solidarity’s call for a national “day of protest” on May Day. Authorities detained at least 200 people nationwide, according to Zbigniew Romaszewski, a spokes man for the outlawed Solidarity union. The violent protests came at the end of a week of strikes and the worst labor unrest in Poland since the communist government sus pended Solidarity in December 1981 and later declared it illegal. There were scattered reports of injuries but figures were not avail able. Government spokesman Jerzy Ur ban confirmed 90 detentions and said at least 12,000 people took part in illegal demonstrations nation wide. Reports from witnesses and opposition spokesmen put the num ber at more than 30,000. The state-run news agency PAP said more than 9 million people at tended official May Day ceremonies throughout the country and at tempts to boycott the May Day dem onstrations ended up yet again in a complete fiasco. Polish leader Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski took a tough line on wage demands during ceremonies in War saw. A strike was in its sixth day at the Lenin steel mill in Nowa Huta out side Krakow. About 800 strikers gathered for a Mass around a make shift altar with a homemade cross in the pressing department. Thirty to 50 people outside the gates were detained when they tried to stage a sympathy march to the plant, which was ringed with pla toons of riot police. Earlier, about 3,000 people marched a half-mile from a Roman Catholic church in Nowa Huta to ward the steel mill but followed po lice orders to disperse. Organizers said about 16,000 workers are on strike at the plant, demanding recognition of their union rights and an immediate 50 percent raise on the average salary of $105 a month. Police withdrew from around the mill in the afternoon. About 120 strikers and 50 family members and friends then had an emotional meet ing at the plant gates. Strike leader Andrzej Szewczuwa- niec, brushing back tears, vowed the strike will continue. “We will not disappoint our wives, our sons, our mothers,” he said. In the evening in Nowa Huta, 5,000 people rallied at a church and taunted police, saying: “So long until the third.” Anti-government demonstrations occur every May 3, Poland’s pre-war Constitution Day. A&M group health insurance premiums to increase about 30 percent next year By Ashley A. Bailey Staff Writer Premiums for the Texas A&M University System’s group health in surance program will increase about \ 30 percent in the next academic year, said Mary Jo Hurley, associate director of the Benefits Programs Administration. Last year, expenses exceeded in come from premiums by about 10 percent, Hurley said, and with ex pected increases in medical costs, higher premiums are necessary. The actual percentage increase, however, will depend on the plan chosen and the number of depen dents insured. Previously, employees and re tirees could participate in either a health maintenance organization or in the group health program, which includes separate medical and dental coverage. During the 1988-89 academic year, policy holders will have the same choices, but with minor altera tions in both the plans’ benefits and in the HMO design. With the new premium rates, em ployees or retirees insuring only themselves will pay $112.03 per month in Plan I, a 19.72 percent in crease, and $77.04 in Plan II, a 27.74 percent increase. Individuals insuring themselves and one dependent will pay $245.67 in Plan I, a 19.72 percent increase, or $164.22 in Plan II, a 27.67 per cent increase. Individuals insuring themselves and two or more dependents will pay $331.39 in Plan I, a 19.76 per cent increase, and $221.37 in Plan II, a 27.53 percent increase. The rates do not reflect the dis tinction between retirees over or un der age 65 that the 1987-88 plans did, she said. The premiums for those over 65 will increase up to 30 percent more than the premiums for insurers un der 65 because claim costs for those over 65 exceeded their premiums by 40 percent. The group as a whole experi enced a 10 percent shortfall. “With the inflation factor in cluded, the premium for the retirees over 65 would increase about 70 per cent, but rather than set their premi ums at the actual level — and price some retirees right out of the plans — it was decided by SEBAC to set premiums based on the entire group,” Hurley said. In addition to the rate changes, Hurley also announced the follow ing changes in plan policies: • Plan I no longer will pay 100 percent hospital benefits. All charges will be subject to a $200 de ductible and insurance will continue to pay 80 percent of all eligible charges up to $4,000 and 100 per cent of eligible charges of more than $4,000. Policy holders will save money, Hurley said, because only one $200 deductible is required for hospital expenses. Previously, $100 upon ad mission and $200 for an extended stay were charged. • Plan IPs deductible will in crease from $200 to $400 for all charges. Insurance will continue to pay 80 percent of all eligible charges up to $6,000 and 100 percent of eli gible charges of more than $6,000. Previously, insurance paid full bene fits after $4,000. Hurley said that if the SBA has calculated premiums and expected expenses properly, the group will break even next year. “Our crystal balls aren’t always as accurate as we’d like them to be,” Hurley said. “We’d like to break even all the time, but sometimes we do and sometimes we don’t.” In another effort to save policy holders money, the BPA has created the TAMUS Tax Saver Plan, BPA associate director Steve Hassel said. The plan will allow participants to have certain tax-deductible expenses subtracted from their paychecks be fore taxes instead of after them. Beginning in September, A&M employees can establish health and dependent-care spending accounts that will pay eligible charges in each of these areas on a pre-tax basis, Hassel said. An enrollment packet with full details on the insurance rates and options, plan designs and the Tax Saver Plan will be mailed to employ ees’ home addresses in early June. The actual enrollment period begins June 6 and ends July 15. Registration for summer begins today Preregistration begins today for the first summer term and the 10-week summer term. Students registering for sum mer school must go to the Pavil ion to get their schedules and fee slips. Schedules and fee slips will not be mailed. The registration schedule by classification is as follows: • Seniors preregister today. • Juniors preregister Tues day. • Sophomores preregister Wednesday. • Freshmen preregister Thursday. • Open preregistration begins Friday. June 6 will be the first day of classes for the first summer term and the 10-week summer term. Registration for the second sum mer session will begin on June 27. Students planning to graduate this summer must fill out degree plans. The filing deadline for the first term is June 17 and the deadline for the second term is July 15, according to the Summer 1988 class schedule. Students who file after June 17 may not receive their diplomas on graduation day because of the length of time needed for print ing, according to the schedule.