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(409) 846-0379 World and Nation NASA says booster seals sound but not infallible Associated Press WASHINGTON — A NASA offi cial told a presidential commission Tuesday that the sealing design for the space shuttle’s rocket boosters was deemed “safe and adequate,” but that after recent ground testing and minor cases of past-flight ero sion, “we felt like it could be im proved.” NASA’s David Winterhalter testi fied that the shuttle was safe to fly. During the second day of public testimony on Challenger explosion, the investigating panel focused on whether NASA had prior warning of a problem with the design and material that joined the four seg ments of its rocket boosters. Winterhalter, acting director of NASA’s shuttle propulsion group, told the panel that NASA engineers were not satisfied with the safety margins they found on testing of the seals. “We’re always striving to make things perfect,” he said. “We're always striving to make things perfect. ” — David Winterhalter, acting director of NASA’s shuttle propulsion group. He said tests were conducted dur ing most of 1985 to determine what changes could be made to the seals and that the testing “intensified as the year went on.” “At no time during that period did any of my men come to me and give any indication that there was a safety or flight problem in their area,” he told the commission. Lawrence Mulloy, head of the solid booster program at the Mar shall Space Flight Center in Ala bama, told the panel that analyses, which followed each of NASA’s 24 successful shuttle flights had deter mined erosion had occurred in six of 171 primary sealing rings. He said there had never been a failure that spread to the second level of sealing protection. The commission, however, re leased a letter dated July 22, 1985 from a supervisor in the rocket pro pulsion section of the agency, warn ing that the design and the method used to check the O-ring seals must be improved. CBS News said Tuesday evening that NASA is studying films of two previous launches for evidence of malfunctions. The network showed a film of the Nov. 26, 1985 launch of Atlantis that appeared to show a sec ond flame at one of the boosters af ter it separated, and a film of Aug. 30, 1984 that appeared to show bur ning fuel above and around one of Discovery’s booster skirts. Malloy said past indications of erosion were not disturbing from a standpoint of safety, adding that NASA hadn’t seen any erosion in the joints between the rocket segments in the year before the Challenger flight. Rights panel divided over hiring quotas Associated Press WASHINGTON — Lawyen for the Equal Employment Op portunity Commission have been told to stop demanding numeri cal hiring goals and timetables in settlements with companies and unions accused of discriminating against women and minority em ployees, officials said Tuesday. Johnny Butler, the EEOC’sact- ing general counsel, said he di rected regional attorneys not to bring any more cases that indude them, although the five-member commission has taken no formal vote on abandoning use of such race- and sex-conscious goals. The administration is sharplv divided on whether numerical goals and timetables are synonv mous with “quotas,” Butler said Because of this, Butlersaid.be told the regional attorneys to stop including the numerical goals in proposed consent decrees. Bars raise prices to protest insurance Associated Press CONCORD, N.H. — “Happy Hour” became a time for imbibers to cry in their beer rather than unwind Tuesday when about 400 New Hampshire restaurant and bar own ers staged an “Unhappy Hour,” charging from $14 for a beer to $32 per martini. Operators were trying to drama tize and gather support against sky rocketing increases in their premi ums for liability insurance. Rates have soared nationally because of in creased litigation and jury awards in liability cases, and one Keene bar owner said much of that was due to drunken drivers. Bar owner Dewey Mark said the participating tavern operators would discount prices back to normal for patrons who joined the protest and signed postcards urging the insur ance commissioner, governor and state lawmakers to back legislation limiting personal injury awards to $250,000 in an effort to hold down rates. The establishments raised prices for drinks by the same percentage their liability insurance rates have risen — 2,000 percent in some cases. At Mark’s restaurants in the resort towns of Gilford and Glenn, a beer was $14 during “Unhappy Hour”; a martini, $32; a snifter of fine brandy, $40 plus. Moe Mozier, owner of Henry Da vid’s Restaurant in Keene and presi dent of the New Hampshire Hospi tality Association, said his bai focused on more common drink such as a bottle of beer for $14. Insurance Commissioner Louii Bergeron said the publicity sur rounding “Unhappy Hour’ wasmii leading. What’s needed, he said, in discussion of the problem radiei than a splashy publicity event. Increasing tne cost of a dnnklit tween 10 cents and 20 cents rathe than multiplying it by up to 20time would cover the increased insurant! premiums. Bergeron said. Slander charges against Walesa dropped Tuesday Associated Press GDANSK, Poland — The state dropped slander charges against Solidarity leader Lech Walesa on Tuesday, and Walesa hailed the de cision as the first step toward com promise by Poland’s Communist government since it crushed the in dependent trade union. At the opening day of Walesa’s trial, the prosecutor said the 12 elec tion officials who filed the complaint were “satisifed” by Walesa’s statement in court that he did not in tentionally slander them when he gave voter turnout figures for na tional elections lower than the offi cial count. The three-judge panel in Gdansk provincial court suspended the case indefinitely. Walesa was in high spirits at a news conference after the trial and said he was happy the government recognized that “political trials are not in the interest of Poland.” He called it “the first step toward compromise since the 13th of De- ipror tber,’ cember,' 1981. That was when the government imposed martial law and crushed Solidarity, the first free trade union in the Soviet bloc. Soli darity was outlawed the following year. The case arose from an October parliamentary election boycotted by Solidarity supporters. Solidarity set up its own voter counting operation to counter the government’s claim that the elections had wide popular support. When the government said the turnout was nearly 79 percent, Soli darity issued figures saying only 66 percent of voters went to the polls. Western diplomats, who spoke on condition they not be identified, said it appeared clear the authorities did not want to risk international dis pleasure by trying Walesa at a time when Poland is seeking new trade credits and is hoping to gain entry to the International Monetary Fund. Mardi Gras continues despite icy weather Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Icy winds kept normally risque Mardi Gras costumes bulky and sedate, but the uproarious pre-Lenten cele bration shifted into high gear Fat Tuesday as parades turned much of the city into a free-wheeling street-party. Crowds jammed shoulder to shoulder on Bourbon Street and the other routes of the five pa rades planned in the city. “C’mon, you stuck up folks! Let’s party!” a young man shouted at the bunaled-up fami lies who lined St. Charles Avenue. Both jazz clarinetist Pete Foun tain’s Half-Fast Walking Club and the Zulu parade were delayed a bit by the weather, but the Rex parade — the swankiest of the Carnival season — rolled right on time. Parade-goers’ costumes, with some stalwart exceptions like a young man in bikini underwear and goose bumps, were dictated by the weather: around freezing, with a 17 mph wind that made it feel like 9 degrees. Bright satin and sequined capes, worn over warm pants and bulky coats, were the most popu lar costume in the French Quar ter. Five friends dressed as oysters on the half-shell — sportint heavy gloves, grey sweatsuits, ana white satin-covered foam shells strapped to their shoulders. Although Mardi Gras is cele brated in cities from Galveston, Texas, to Mobile, Ala., New Or leans has the biggest show. People spend an estimated $50 million to put on and participate in the parades and balls for the five weeks leading up to Lent. The celebrating officially ends at midnight, but French Quarter bars will be rocking for hours af ter the arrival of Ash Wednesday. Fat Tuesday is the biggest Car nival day since Sunday when Bac chus and 10 other krewes pa raded. During that parade, two men were shot and wounded, another was knifed and two other men, apparently drunk, fell from trac tors that were pulling floats. In the most serious Carnival- related episode, a Houston man was fatally stabbed Friday night Italian mayor fights to rid Palermo of Mafia influence Associated Press PALERMO, Sicily — “If you let fear stop you, nothing will change,” says Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who is trying to rid Palermo of Mafia influ ence that has been woven into the city’s fabric over centuries. The mayor feels that success will come only through the people’s will and the state’s unwavering commit ment. When the trial of 474 alleged Ma fia members began Monday, Or lando was in the courtroom, sitting in a show of solidarity with the wid ows and children of men who were killed fighting the pervasive criminal society. “You fight the Mafia with repres sion but also with economic devel opment,” he said in an interview. Italy’s poor south is ripe prey for organized crime, he said. Since taking office in July, the 38- year-old Christian Democrat has earned a reputation for boldness, honesty and courage. An example of Orlando’s ap proach to the job is his decision that contracts for city services and con struction be granted by competitive bidding. The previous system, considered ideal for the Mafia, was to give the jobs to those who had previous con tracts with the city, regardless of cost or qualifications. The Mafia’s strength hasbeenai tributed in part to a Sicilian distruii of outsiders inspired by centuriescf foreign exploitation that led peas ants to turn to bandits for protet- tion, for a price. Orlando says that arrangementi- 1 weakening and the wave of killing of police officials, government lea^ ers, journalists and judges investigat ing the Mafia has convinced manyof Palermo’s people that their worH must change. SPRING TIME SAVINGS ON TOYOTA SERVICE! Important: You must present coupon & TAMU ID at time of service order. 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