State and local 3 Tuesday, January 29, 1991 The Battalion Seventy-three seconds of silence Americans commemorate tragedy of Challenger disaster CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Space center workers who will never forget where they were five years ago fell silent for 73 seconds Monday to honor the seven astro nauts who died in the ex- plosion of space shuttle Challenger. All activity at NASA’s . . . ..„ Kennedy McAullffe Space Center halted at 11:38 a.m., the time of Challenger’s fi nal liftoff on Jan. 28, 1986. It ex ploded 73 seconds later over the Atlantic Ocean. The dead included Christa McAuliffe, the Concord, N.H., schoolteacher who had planned live lessons from orbit for the nation’s students. She was the first ordinary American to ven ture into space. At Concord High School, where McAuliffe taught, stu dents and faculty also paused for a moment of silence. Five years ago, cheering students had jammed the school’s auditorium watching the launch on tele vision before their joy turned to horror. At Firestone High School in Akron, Ohio, where astronaut Judith Resnik graduated in 1966, attentive students listened to a commemorative account of her life. “You could hear a pin drop,” said Principal William Hoik. At the cape, Kennedy Space Center’s director, Forrest Mc Cartney, in a message televised throughout the launch site, asked employees as he has each anniversary to “remember and honor the crew of Challenger and at the same time recommit ourselves to excellence in every thing we do.” Thirteen missions have been accomplished safely since shuttle flights resumed in September 1988 and “these have been five years of accomplishment of which we can all be proud,” Mc Cartney said. Workers stopped whatever they were doing and bent their heads in offices, cafeteria lines and on sidewalks. Security guards slowly lowered flags to half-staff. No official observances were held at Johnson Space Center in Houston or at NASA headquar ters in Washington. But NASA Administrator Richard Truly, in a written message to employees, said the seven would never be forgotten. “It has been through your tireless efforts in the interim that we have profited from the im portant lessons we learned,” Truly said. A leak in a joint on Challeng er’s right solid rocket booster caused America’s worst space di saster. The shuttle and booster have since been extensively re designed. Shuttle director Robert Crip- pen, a former astronaut, and about 100 people attended an observance at a granite memo rial to the Challenger crew in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. The adjoining grave of mis sion commander Francis “Dick” Scobee was decorated with a pot of zinnias and a single rose with a card from “Your wife, June, and the children.” Crippen added a white carnation. The other four Challenger crew members were Michael Smith, Ellison Onizuka, Ronald McNair and Gregory Jarvis. A State revises policies concerning sex, abuse at schools for retarded DALLAS (AP) — The rape and pregnancy of a profoundly retarded resident of the Lubbock State School has prompted the state to revise poli cies on sex and abuse at schools for the mentally retarded. Debra Lynn Thomas, 33, who doctors say has the intellectual ca pacity of a 2-year-old, gave birth to a boy Jan. 1. Her brother-in-law, Jimmy Wooten, 40, was charged with rape. He has proclaimed his in nocence. Last week, the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retar dation announced that it was chang ing its policies on sexual relations and investigations of sexual-abuse allegations in state schools. The announcement came after 17 years of haggling in a Dallas-based federal lawsuit over treatment of state school residents. A new “human sexuality policy” that prohibits sexual intercourse be tween unmarried residents of state schools and other state facilities for the mentally retarded took effect Friday, MHMR Commissioner Den nis Jones said. State schools also adopted a “cor rective action plan” to improve med ical treatment and care of residents, he said. The policies were developed from the recommendations of a four- member review team appointed by the commissioner after Thomas was raped. “I’m very happy that some good has come out of the tragedy ot De bra Thomas,” said Philadelphia law yer David Ferleger, who represents Thomas and other state school resi dents in the federal lawsuit. Thomas, who was a resident of the Lubbock State School when the crime occurred, has been placed in a private home under state supervi sion. Her baby was placed in the care of her sister, Dori Wooten, wife ol Jimmy Wooten. Jimmy Wooten is being held in the Lubbock Jail on $250,000 bail. Police charge two Irving teens in slaying of four at Taco Bell IRVING (AP) — Two teen-agers were charged Monday with capital murder in the slayings of four peo ple who were gunned down execu tion-style in a restaurant freezer during a weekend robbery. Mike Green, 17, and Jessy Carlos San Miguel, 19, both of Irving, were charged with one count each of capi tal murder. Three additional capital murder charges are expected to be filed against each on Tuesday, Ir ving police Capt. TJ. Hall said. They remained jailed without bail in Irving. The bodies, including those of three employees, were discovered in a Taco Bell walk-in freezer after po lice officers stopped the driver of a pickup on suspicion of drunken driving early Saturday morning and spotted a take-out Taco Bell sack stuffed with cash. Green worked at the restaurant part-time in this Dallas suburb. San Miguel, who was driving the truck when they were stopped by police, was out on bail facing trial on three burglary charges when the crime oc curred. Theresa Fraga, 16, of Irving, her cousin Frank Fraga, 23, of Dallas, restaurant manager Michael J. Phe lan, 28, of Fort Worth and Fraga family friend Son Trong Nguyen, 35, of Irving, were fatally shot at the Taco Bell restaurant. Nguyen was at the restaurant to pick up Fraga, who was several months pregnant and had a 1-year- old son. The slayings bring to nine the number of people killed during late night shifts at restaurants or food stores in Dallas County since Dec. 4. Police seek information in multiple Bryan department store burglaries Brazos County Crime Stoppers and the Bryan Police Department are asking for information about three separate burglaries at a Bryan department store. During the week of Dec. 7- 13, the downtown Bryan Woolworth store was broken into three times. In each case, the thieves entered the build ing by smashing in a glass door. Once inside, the suspects grabbed several items before leaving the premises. Woolworth representa tives report that several sewing ma chines were stolen along with several stereo radio-cassette players, a 20- SAftei STOPPERS ■■■■■■■■■■I 775-TIPS inch television, 54 plaid flannel shirts and 20 wrist watches. Wool- worth representatives estimate the store’s loss to be more than $6,500. Bryan police detectives believe the same persons committed all three burglaries and these people have been attempting to sell or trade these items in the local area. Five weeks ago these burglaries were featured as the crime of the week, since that time Crime Stop pers has received only one call re garding the offense. Investigatoi s also have exhausted all leads. If your call leads to an arrest and grand jury indictment, Crime Stop pers will pay you up to $1,000 in cash. Crime Stoppers also pays cash for information on any felony crime or the location of a wanted fugitive. So call Brazos County Crime Stop pers today at 775-TIPS. JESUS: THE GOOD SHEPHERD I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd tgiveth his life for the sheep. John 10:11 We are a group of faculty who are united by their common experience that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students and faculty who might like to discuss such questions with us. We are FACULTY FRIENDS. Noel Addy Accounting Richard M. Alexander Mechanical Engineering Richard K. Anderson Economics Jan Baldwin Health and Kinesiology Danny Ballard Health and Kinesiology George W. Bates Biochemistry Michael R. Baye Economics Sue Beall Health & Kinesiology James R. Boone Mathematics Chris Borman Education Walter L. 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