TKe Battalion WEATHER TOMORROWS FORECAST: Partly cloudy and hot. HIGH: 90s LOW: 70s Vol. 88 No. 187 USPS 045360 6 Pages shon College Station, Texas Friday, August 11,1989 e their nets t i ified times J )l ‘ld folk'' prohibited, rawling W J midnight to ling allowedJ a-m. The r J nilarly beU ling times, n trawling I ''cement and] re turtles tJ ice,” accord] ents filed y S so muchoJ filiations, ctd try low in ] ocument said] that manvtj tts of those ml ng to use J ise nes er of one o: I ’dies in AlalJ iTexas has most plants releasing toxic chemicals irtuallv el ■ DALLAS (AP) — A list of plants releasing highly hazardous toxic chemicals into the environment in cludes almost twice as many loca tions in Texas as in any other state, inc luding four out of the top 10. ■ The “Toxic 500” compiled by the National Wildlife Federation and re leased Thursday is the latest in a re cent series of environmental black eyes for Texas. A less-detailed ver sion of the figures in June ranked Texas high in producing air pollut ion; an earlier report said a buta diene plant in Port Neches, topped a list of plants emitting enough chemi- ipls to increase the risk of cancer. I Sixty-four Texas plants are in cluded on the federation’s list, culled JVom the Environmental Protection Agency’s 1987 Toxic Release Inven tory; Ohio was second in the list with J}8 plants. I The releases, which are legal, in cluded more than 300 different ihemicals and metals, 39 of which pre considered carcinogenic, or can cer-causing. I Two Texas ALCOA plants placed first and third on the list, with the [plant in Point Comfort, reporting it Released 465.35 million pounds of loxic wastes in 1987, almost all of it aluminum oxide buried at the fa- |ility. The Rockdale plant reported 29.11 million pounds of buried alu- inum oxide, by far the most widely produced toxic waste among the big- ;est polluters. The EPA currently is considering n industry request to take alumi- um oxide off its toxic substance list, laiming it poses no chronic health isks. But opponents argue it is armful to the respiratory system nd possibly linked to brain damage. In all, the 64 Texas plants re- leased 1.78 billion pounds of toxic vastes, or more than 23 percent of he total of 7.5 billion pounds of oxic wastes during 1987. uaies in fed ure Commiii licates the me Admin® r colonias' % m '%;%< % ’ ' I ’ * [Wi ' kt, Return of the Tennis Ball Paul Baker, a first-year medical student from Belton, and his opponent Dennis Upton (not pictured) enjoy a match at Omar Smith Tennis Photo by Kathy Haveman Center Tuesday afternoon. The two were among many local people outdoors, enjoying the unseasonably moderate weather. Sports passes go by wayside in fall I.D.s will be used By Kelly S. Brown SENIOR STAFF WRITER Starting this fall students won’t be waiting in line the first week of school to pick up their all-sports or football ticket book, nor will they have to keep track of it throughout the semester — identification cards will be used to pick up tickets at the gate. For those who purchased either pass, the option will be placed into the coding on their I.D. cards, and the cards will be read through scan ners as with meal plans in dining halls. Penny King, business manager for the Athletic Department, said the I.D. card will be better protected un der the new system. If a student re ports a lost I.D. card, that informa tion will be entered into a computer, and if someone tries to use the I.D. they will be caught, she said. The name of who is drawing tickets for themselves or anyone else will re main in the computer. When a student adds the option when registering, the Athletic De partment immediately will have that record, King said. Records will be updated throughout the first week of school. An all-sports pass is $70, while a football pass is $55. Tickets for home football games are distributed on a classification basis as follows: • Graduates and seniors — Mon day prior to game day. • Juniors — Tuesday • Sophomores — Wednesday • Freshmen — Thursday • Non-season & all classes (if available) — Friday Students are allowed to pick up a maximum of 10 tickets in a group (I.D. cards are required for each stu dent ticket). Half of the group must be of that day’s classification or of a previous day’s, and the other half may be of lower classification or full price non-student guests. Student tickets for the November 24 Arkansas game will be distributed to graduate students and seniors Thursday Nov. 16, juniors on Fri day, sophomores on Monday and freshmen on Tuesday. Questions should be directed to the ticket office 845-2311. ties r water, se*? 000 people I d. d he had asl rher priori!' at needs in recently toi| e measure) j to helping "i istress call may have been Leland Searchers find hope in faint signal far off plane’s charted course DMV official says license plate slogans may be abandoned DALLAS (AP) — Texans who are Commission will reconsider the tag in a dither over a proposal to place motto at its Aug. 29 meeting. ‘‘’Trn.o ™ think all of the slogans will be d it will M i by audit] which thetf ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Crews searching for the plane carry ing U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland on Thursday were told that a U.S. satel lite picked up an aircraft signal, and rescue workers were dispatched to the rugged area. The weather satellite pinpointed the source of the signal at 84 miles southeast of the capital, Addis Ababa, far off the flight plan of the missing plane. Robert Houdek, the charge d’af- fairs at the U.S. Embassy in Addis Leland staff clings to hope'Page 6 )nal $15 efore e due as led borro*' Sept I over the K lion will kj ligh-ratetj ig losses a'l under M n rescue' 1 Ababa, said the location indicated it came from a source other than Le- land’s plane, but he told reporters, “We are taking this information very seriously ... as we would take se riously any lead in the search for congressman Leland and his party.” The Democrat from Houston, who is chairman of the House Select Committee on Hunger, took off Monday morning with 13 other peo ple, including eight Americans, for the Fugnido refugee camp 480 miles southwest of Addis Ababa. The twin-engine Twin Otter air craft was reported missing Monday evening. A satellite from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis tration picked up the faint distress signal at 3:42 a.m. Thursday (8:42 plane, Rep. Mickey Leland p.m. EDT Wednesday). “It could have been another plane flying over the area and the pilot fin gered his microphone and the satel lite picked up the blip,” Houdek said. James T. Baily, manager of the administration’s search and rescue satellite program, said subsequent satellite passes had not been able to confirm the signal because of radio interference. Satellites passing over the area broadcast their signals to a ground station in Bangalore, India. Ethiopia is on the fringe of the coverage area for the Bangalore station, making it hard to get an accurate location on signals received from Ethiopia, Bai ley said. Houdek said bad weather pre vented planes from flying into the region where the signal originated. The Ethiopian Ministry of Internal Affairs contacted security officials at Goba, ,28 miles from the source of the signal, and instructed them to send out foot patrols to investigate in the darkness. In Washington, Alma Newsom, Leland’s press secretary, told report ers she was somewhat skeptical the signal came from Leland’s considering his destination. “The location just seems so strange that we’re not drawing any conclusions,” she said. Leland’s plane was equipped with an emergency locator transmitter, a device usually mounted in the tail of an aircraft and activated either auto matically by impact or manually. Depending on its type, an emer gency locator transmits either an in termittent or steady signal on a fixed frequency, allowing searchers to pin point the location of a downed air craft. Two U.S. Air Force C-130 Her cules cargo planes arrived Thursday and spent three hours flying over the path that Leland’s plane was sup posed to have taken. A U-2 aircraft also joined the search. U-2s are capable of taking high-resolution photographs over a broad area and were once commonly used for espionage missions. Four U.S. Army Blackhawk heli copters were expected to arrive Fri day. Four Ethiopian Air Force heli copters were also added, joining the U.S. fleet and more than a dozen light planes under the direction of the Ethiopian Civil Aviation Author ity. For three days, the search has cen tered on a high, mountainous pla teau near the Sudanese border, not far from the Fugnido refugee camp. Monday there were reports that peasants heard a light plane circling one or two dirt landing strips in an area 50 miles from Leland’s destina tion. the motto “The Friendship State” on auto license plates can settle down now. Dian Neill, director of the Divi sion of Motor Vehicles, said the slo gan is unlikely to ever appear on the plates. “I’m going to recommend that we have no slogan so we can kill the con troversy,” Neill told the Dallas Morning News Wednesday. State highway commissioners in dicated they would go along with her recommendation to drop the motto and a powder blue outline proposed for new plates. The newspaper reported the highway department received more than 1,000 telephone calls and seve ral thousand letters opposing the slogan after commissioners gave ap proval to the proposal last month. Although “friendship” is the offi cial state motto, adopted by the Texas Legislature in 1930, Texas has been more commonly known as the Lone Star State, and some peo ple have criticized the “friendship” label as “wimpy.” The State Department of High ways and Public Transportation removed,” Commissioner Ray Stoker of Odessa said. However, Stoker also said it may be possible to make a slogan optional for drivers who want one on their new plates. Stoker suggested motor ists could pay an extra $30 for their choice of “The Friendship State” or “The Lone Star State.” Most of the money generated through the additional fee would be used to renovate the state Capitol in Austin, Stoker said. Although more residents favor the “Lone Star State” as a license plate motto, objections have sur faced . Some observers said the motto would give companies that use Lone Star in their names an unfair advan tage. However, Clyde Hopkins, Texas spokesman for Anheuser-Busch Co., said the “Lone Star” slogan would not affect the competition in the beer industry. Last year, Busch reportedly sold 78.5 million barrels of beer, com pared to 900,000 barrels sold by the Lone Star Brewing Co. Air Force spokesman confirms shuttle deployment of satellite Bush appoints Powell, first black, as chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush named Army Gen. Colin L. Powell, a veteran of both the battle fields of Vietnam and the corridors of power in the White House, as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Thursday. Powell, 52, will become the youngest officer and the first black ever to hold the nation’s highest military post. “I am ready to go to it and I look forward to the chal lenges ahead,” Powell said, standing alongside Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle at an afternoon an nouncement ceremony in the Rose Garden. The nomination drew immediate praise on Capitol Hill and is expected to win confirmation easily in the Senate. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Service Committee, called Powell “an excellent nominee.” Nunn said his panel would hold confirma tion proceedings soon after Congress returns from re cess in September. Sen. John Warner of Virginia, ranking Republican on the committee, said, “He’s eminently qualified. . . . I’ve been present in the Oval Office and Cabinet room when military issues were discussed with the president. When he spoke, everybody listened.” “He has had vast military experience and his partici pation as security adviser to the president will add a unique dimension,” said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., an other member of the committee. Powell, national security adviser to President Reagan in the final year of his administration, was picked by Bush over more than 30 more senior officers. He will succeed Adm. William Crowe Jr., who is re tiring Sept. 30. The chairman is the chief adviser on military affairs to Bush and Defense Secretary Richard Cheney. Bush praised Powell, a decorated veteran of two combat tours in Vietnam, as a complete soldier and a distinguished scholar. Powell is considered a military in tellectual who is willing to express his views when asked but who does not have an ideological agenda. “As we face the challenges of the ’90s, it is most im portant that the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff be a person of breadth, judgment, experience and total in tegrity,” Bush said. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — Columbia’s astronauts continued their secret work Thursday high above the Earth, but the Air Force secretary briefly broke the official si lence to confirm the crew’s deploy ment of a satellite. The device was widely believed to be a powerful spy satellite designed to snap highly detailed photographs of military targets over a large area of the globe, including most of the Sovet Union. No official word came from either NASA or the Defense Department about the 10-ton satellite until secre tary Donald Rice said a satellite had been released. “The United States now has a sa tellite in orbit as the result of a very successful launch,” Rice told report ers after a ceremony at McDili Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla. His com ments were made Wednesday, but were not generally reported until Thursday. “I can say that was a very impor tant day for the Air Force and the nation’s space program,” Rice said when questioned about the reported deployment of the satellite about seven hours after liftoff Tuesday. “We were extraordinarily pleased as were our colleagues in NASA that everything went so well.” But w'hen asked about the satel lite’s purpose, Rice replied, “I’m not at liberty to say.” The Defense Department im posed the news blackout on the clas sified mission. Unless a major prob lem occurs, the silence is not expected to be broken again until Saturday when an exact landing time is announced. NASA officials said Columbia will land Sunday at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., sometime between 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. CDT. During the rest of their flight, the all-military crew apparently planned to conduct tests to determine man’s role as a military observer in space. Those tests were to be coordinated with undisclosed ground exercises that could include troop maneuvers, naval movements and missile launches. In addition, a package of scientific instruments for military research, possibly for the “Star Wars” missile defense program reportedly are in Columbia’s cargo bay. Columbia, NASA’s oldest shuttle, is making its first flight in more than 3 years. Commencement ceremonies feature presidential assistant, Mexican University president The guest speakers for com mencement ceremonies Friday and Saturday include the president of a Mexican university and an assistant to the president of the United States. Enrique Cardenas, president of the Universidad de las Americas in Puebla, Mexico, will address under graduate and graduate degree can didates from the Colleges of Busi ness Administration, Architecture, Medicine, Geosciences, Science and Veterinary Medicine in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Addressing undergraduate de gree candidates from the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Edu cation, Engineering, Liberal Arts and Texas A&M University at Gal veston will be George Bush’s assis tant for legislative affairs, Frederick D. McClure. The ceremony Satur day begins at 9 a.m. in G. Rollie White. McClure is a former Texas A&M student body president. Officers entering the military service will be commissioned Satur day.