The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, June 11, 1987, Image 5

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    state/nation/world
Weinberger doubts
By TIM AHERN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger said yesterday that he doesn’t think Iran will
attack U.S. Navy ships in the Persian Gulf, despite the
continuing threats voiced by the Islamic revolutionary
nation.
Weinberger’s prediction came hours after Tehran Ra
dio broadcast a new threat warning that Iran might
attack American nuclear reactors.
Weinberger told the House Foreign Affairs Committee
that “in the past, Iran has assiduously avoided even the
mere hint of a threat toward U.S. ships, either combatant
or commercial.”
“We do not expect that situation to change, Iran’s
violent rhetoric notwithstanding,” he said. “We believe
they will not launch any attacks on American ships.”
Weinberger’s prediction came as he and Adm. William
Crowe Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spent a
second day on Capitol Hill discussing U.S. policy in the
gulf region, a major source of oil for the West.
Reagan officials
oppose stricter
notification rules
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. The Rea
gan administration yesterday tried to
head off stricter congressional notifi
cation requirements for covert opera
tions.
State Department and Central In
telligence Agency witnesses told a
House panel the Democratic-spon
sored legislation was ah overreaction
to President Reagan’s failure to noti
fy Congress of secret U.S. arms sales
to Iran.
That failure was an aberration,
according to Michael H. Armacost,
State Department undersecretary for
political affairs, and David P. Doher
ty, general counsel for the CIA.
While the witnesses and Republi
can panel members argued strongly
for presidential flexibility in foreign
policy, Democrats on the House Intel
ligence Committee’s legislation sub
committee took a different view.
They said a maximum delay of 48
hours should be established for the
president to notify Congress re
placing the current requirement of
“timely” notification of covert ac
tions.
Rep. Matthew F. McHugh, D-N.Y.,
panel chairman, said something is
wrong with a system in which “mer
chants of arms knew about this but
the Speaker of the House cannot be
trusted.”
President Reagan has promised to provide U.S. flag
protection to Kuwaiti tankers, raising congressional fears
that the United States might be drawn into the Iran-Iraq
war. Kuwait is an ally of Iraq.
The fears have been heightened by the May 17 missile
attack on the frigate USS Stark by an Iraqi warplane that
killed 37 sailors. Weinberger and Crowe both said yester
day that they accept Iraqi explanations that the attack
was a mistake.
Administration sources said Tuesday that the Navy’s
Mideast Task Force in the gulf will temporarily swell in
size to as many as a dozen warships by early July and
then drop to a standing force of eight or nine to provide
escorts for the Kuwaiti tankers.
The Navy has selected three ships currently deployed in
the Pacific for duty in the gulf in addition to three other
combat vessels that left the East Coast for the region last
weekend, said the sources, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
The aircraft carrier Constellation, meantime, will
move into a patrol position outside the gulf during the first
week of July.
He referred to private middlemen
who former National Security Coun
cil aide Oliver L. North used as inter
mediaries in the arms sales to Iran.
In arguing for retaining existing
law, which also provides for consulta
tion with lawmakers, Armacost said,
“In attempting to fix a system that is
not broken, Congress risks impairing
the effectiveness of an essential poli
cy tool.”
Both administration witnesses em
phasized changes Reagan made after
the Iran-Contra affair became public,
especially a prohibition against the
National Security Council staff un
dertaking covert actions.
, The arms sales to Iran, diversion of
some profits to the Nicaraguan Con
tras and sale of weapons to the rebels
when Congress had banned official
U.S. aid were directed from the NSC.
Current law provides that in gener
al, the president should notify the two
congressional intelligence commit
tees before undertaking a covert op
eration he has authorized. There are
two exceptions.
First, in extraordinary circum
stances, the president may limit prior
notice to a leadership group of eight
members of the House and Senate. ■
Second, in certain undefined cases,
the chief executive may skip prior
notice, but must provide the intelli
gence panels notice in a “timely
fashion” along with an explanation of
the delay.
threat from Iran
Weinberger and Crowe refused to say publicly what the
United States might do if Iran does strike U.S. ships,
whether the vessels are Navy craft or the reflagged
Kuwaiti tankers. U.S officials have said they would treat
an attack on a reflagged Kuwaiti vessel the same way
they would an attack on an American-owned ship.-
Both Iran and and Iraq have been attacking tankers for
the past three years, although 70 percent of those strikes
came from Iraq, Weinberger noted.
He challenged what he said is a public perception that
the gulf is a free-fire zone. “On any given ay there are
approximately 400 ships in the Persian Gulf and since 1984
less than 1 percent have been attacked,” he said.
The Stark attack shows that “danger is always near,”
Weinberger continued. “But it should not be allowed to
distort appearances beyond reality. The actual threat to
U.S. shipping in the Persian Gulf has not changed since
March when we briefed members of the Congress on our
reflagging initiative with Kuwait.”
Crowe voiced similar sentiments, testifying that “the
gulf today is an uncertain place and can be dangerous, but
it is not a war zone in the accepted use of the words.”'
First lady flies
after Swedish
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer
VENICE, Italy Nancy Reagan,
chosen by a poll of American men as
the woman they’d most like to spend
an evening with, joked today that her
anti-drug visit to Sweden might be
her last alone because the president
was worried about competition.
Speaking to reporters on the flight
from Stockholm to Venice, the first
lady said she was flattered by the
Gallup poll results but that her first
choice for a wonderful evening was
still “Ronald Reagan.”
“I talked to my husband last night
and he said, ‘l’m sitting here with a
poll in my hand . . . and I think you
better get over here soon,’ ” she said,
laughing.
Asked ,what Reagan said about the
seven-nation economic summit, the
first lady replied: “It was late at
night, you. know, and he was more
occupied by the poll.”
Lame shuttle used in tests
By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. The Enterprise, a space shuttle
that can’t go into space and has never shuttled, is
suffering new indignities out of the public’s eye. It sits in a
remote field, draped with hundreds of nylon straps, like a
Gulliver restrained by Lilliputians.
Its purpose is to help test a “Shuttle Orbiter Arresting
System,” which is a giant net that the National Aeronau
tics and Space Administration hopes to put at remote
emergency landing sites like Dakar, Senegal, or Zarago
za and Moron, Spain.
The idea is that if the shuttle has to land at one of those
places, which have relatively short runways, the system
can be erected to halt the shuttle, which is notorious for
having bad brakes.
Engineers have been at Washington Dulles Internation
al Airport in suburban Virginia all week to test the net. If
that conjures up an image of the 130-ton space plane
hurtling down a runway into the contraption, forget it.
Since American military forces have been more alert in
the wake of the Stark attack, he said, “we have not as yet
seen any change in Iranian conduct at sea in fact, they
appear to be even more cautious than previously.”
“While this situation could change quickly, I would
suggest that we base our judgments and actions on
tangible evidence rather than conjecture,” Crowe said.
In a floor speech yesterday, Senate Republican Leader
Bob Dole of Kansas criticized American allies for provid
ing “good rhetoric” instead of strong material support for
U.S. moves in the Persian Gulf.
Dole said the position taken Tuesday at the summit of
seven industrialized nations in Venice, Italy, left most of
the responsibility for protecting the vital oil route up to
the United States.
Reagan, who did not seek military help, has pronounced
himself “delighted” with the summit position on the gulf,
which called for unspecified “just and effective mea
sures” to guarantee safe passage of ships and a cease-fire
in the Iran-Iraq war.
Weinberger, in his testimony yesterday, said it is up to
the United States to protect the gulf.
When asked for her reaction to
another Gallup poll in Europe, in
which 56 percent of respondents said
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was
contributing to peace and only 12
percent said Reagan was making a
similar contribution, Nancy Reagan
said: “Well I don’t believe that. I
don’t like that poll. I like my other
poll.”
The Gallup survey on the woman
that men would most like to spend an
evening with was commissioned by
Fast Lane magazine. Others placing
high were actresses Heather Lock
lear, Raquel Welch and Lynda Car
ter.
The first lady left Stockholm today
to rejoin the president in Venice after
a two-day anti-drug campaign
marred by anti-American protests.
The first lady told U.S. Embassy
personnel before leaving that her trip
had been “a learning experience. I’ll
take a lot of things back to the United
States with me.”
The Enterprise was pulled through, a few inches at a
time, to see how the elaborate net drapes over it.
“We wouldn’t want to catch the nosewheel on the net
and break it,” said Dick Melone, on loan to NASA from
the Naval Air Engineering Center at Lakehurst, N.J.
“That’s the most vulnerable part of the orbiter.”
Reporters were invited out to see the shuttle, but not the
actual testing.
The Navy was brought in because it knows something
about snagging planes when they land on a carrier deck.
The system designed for the shuttle is similar, only
bigger.
The system, designed by All American Engineering
Company of Newark, Del., consists of a nylon net assem
bly suspended 25 feet above the runway surface with
supports on either side. When it’s put in place there will be
“energy absorbers” on each side to provide the braking
force for the orbiter.
The shuttle normally lands at about 200 mph; the net is
designed to stop it if it’s going about half that speed.
The Daily Collegian
to Venice
appearance
Praising Nancy Reagan’s endeav
ors, Ambassador Gregory Newell
said “she has been a great messenger
of hope for those who have strayed
and a messenger of resolve to those
who have resisted.”
I ''
AP Laserphoto
, Nancy Reagan
state news briefs fev
Rabies bill fine-tuned
HARRISBURG (AP) A House-Senate conference committee
yesterday fine tuned legislation for imposing penalties on residents
who fail to have their dog and cats inoculated against rabies.
The committee over a two-week period made several significant
revisions to the bill, including adding a provision providing veteri
narians with immunity from civil actions that might stem from
their participation in rabies-shot clinics.
Rep. Russell Letterman, the Centre County Democrat who
chaired the committee, said the immunity provision would encour
age more veterinarians to participate in low-cost clinics.
Group lobbies for min. wage hike
WASHINGTON (AP) Several dozen low-wage and unemployed
Philadelphians lobbied federal lawmakers yesterday in favor of a
proposal to raise the minimum wage.
One of the jobless members of the so-called Philadelphia Unem
ployment Project dressed like Abraham Lincoln to call attention to
“slave jobs.” The group met with Rep. Thomas Foglietta, D-Pa.,
and other lawmakers.
Code violations found at restaurant
PHILADELPHIA (AP) City officials have found eight fire
code violations and about 20 electrical violations at a restaurant
where a diner received an electrical shock, but do not know if any of
the violations contributed to the man’s death.
Henry G. Herling, city commissioner of Licenses and Inspection,
said Tuesday the 304-year old Valley Green Inn in Fairmount Park
was ordered to remain closed until all violations are corrected.
The electrical code violations include the use of extension cords
for appliances. Last Saturday, William M. Shrader, 66, of Flour
town received an electrical shock after apparently unplugging an
air conditioner at the restaurant. He died about 30 minutes later at
Chestnut Hill Hospital.
nation news briefs
AIDS booklets urge abstinence
WASHINGTON (AP) A pair of booklets, unveiled yesterday,
for use by elementary and high schools to teach about AIDS rely on
telling students to abstain from sex and drugs and refer only in
passing to homosexuality and condoms.
The booklets’ authors, Linda Meeks and Philip Heit, said deci
sions on what kinds of information to include were influenced by
what some school districts said would be unacceptable.
“There are certain school systems that just will not introduce
certain terms,” Heit said at a news conference.
The booklets, “AIDS What You Should Know” and “AIDS
Understanding and Prevention,” are intended for use by students
in grades five through eight and by high school students, respec
tively.
Pupils mastering written language
WASHINGTON (AP) American school children may have
trouble putting their ideas down on paper in a thoughtful manner,
but they are mastering the mechanics of grammar, punctuation
and spelling, a testing agency said yesterday.
The federally sponsored National Assessment of Educational
Progress said its findings should be comforting for everyone
“concerned about how well the nation’s students are learning to
control the conventions of written language.”
The agency’s brief report, “Grammar, Punctuation, and Spel
ling,” is third study drawn from a 1984 test of the writing abilities of
6,000 students ages 9,13 and 17.
Weather satellites out of service
WASHINGTON (AP) The nation’s prime weather satellites
were out of service for several hours after lightning strikes
disabled their ground receiving station Tuesday night, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports.
At least three lightning bolts hit the agency’s satellite station at
Wallops, Va., overwhelming defensive measures including light
ning rods, surge suppressors and a grounding system, the agency
said.
Damage was extensive, officials said, and NOAA personnel
worked most of the night restoring service.
The station was unable to obtain weather images from GOES-
West, the stationary satellite watching the western half of the
nation, from 7:15 p.m. EDT Tuesday until 4:15 a.m., Wednesday,
the agency said. GOES-East images were blanked out from 7:30
p.m. until 1 a.m.
Possible red tide in Delaware
DOVER, Del. (AP) Delaware health and environmental
officials are trying to determine whether a red tide has hit the
Indian River Bay.
An extensive fish kill was discovered near the Rosedale Beach
area Monday morning, and state officials said they were looking
for microorganisms in the bay that have been connected elsewhere
to red tides.
A deadly red tide occurs when concentrations of a particular
microorganism become so heavy that the waters appear stained
red or brown, and toxins released by the organisms reach deadly
levels. A red tide never has been reported in Delaware.
“This is not a typical kill,” said Roy W. Miller, supervisor of
finfisheries for the state Department of Natural Resources and
Environmental Control. “It’s a big kill. Thousands of fish, all
different types. Every species you would expect in the Indian River
estuary.”
world news briefs
Missing former impresario found
LONDON (AP) Sir Rudolf Bing, 85-year-old former head of
New York’s Metropolitan Opera, was found wandering the streets
of east London early yesterday after disappearing from his hotel
for the second time in two weeks.
“He was apparently none the worse for wear,” said a spokeswo
man for Scotland Yard, the London police headquarters. “He was
asked who he was, and then taken back to his hotel.”
Bing was discovered in London’s Hackney district 16 hours after
he left his modest hotel near King’s Cross train station to buy
cigarettes. He had wandered 2*4 miles away.
Bing disappeared from the same hotel on May 28 in the same
circumstances. Ten hours later, he was found unharmed wan
dering along a street in Chelsea more than 3 miles away.
“I must be more careful never to leave him without checking that
he has got cigarettes,” Bing’s 47-year-old wife, Carroll, said
yesterday.
E. Germany spurns diplomatic protest
BERLIN (AP) West Germany today renewed its diplomatic
protest over the mistreatment of Western reporters by East
German police during demonstrations by rock music fans near the
Berlin Wall, officials said.
Carl Duisberg, an official in the Bonn chancellory, delivered the
protest during a meeting with Lothar Glienke, a top-ranking
representative of East Germany’s diplomatic mission in Bonn, a
West German government spokesman said.
East Berlin officials rejected a protest on Tuesday and accused
Western journalists of reporting lies in their coverage of the
demonstrations.
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1986 DODGE 600 2 DR. COUPE Light silver exterior with a dk.
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$17,600 Reduced to $14,900
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1986 NISSAN STANZA XE STATION WAGON - 5 speed, factory
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1985 NISSAN LONG BED - #1277A. 5 speed, 24,000 miles. Dark
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1983 HONDA ACCORD 4DR - Automatic, air conditioning, cruise
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The Daily Collegian Thursday, June 11,
.$34,700