Friday, March 14, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 9 World and Nation wsiJacU Kfroniafl ih three would Im^ t v in repi irsi points is, 32-U Sures,ledl 15, and nasting m 1-8, Ipi Midwest Hi Temple: Arrest made in Palme's assassination Thompa points an s No. bin ii the secon :M2, inti , Utah. mtermisw |mints inti second-k aimebad. iiiySandtn ,on with mectedo ■ the scorei led (he th five mil iregA I STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Po lice on Thursday announced their first arrest in the investiga tion of Prime Minister Olof Palme's assassination, but the sus- jpect was not immediately Itharged. I Police spokesman Leif Hal- jlberg said, “I can confirm that af- ler following up various tips, we liad reason to arrest a man on (suspicion of complicity in the piurder.” But lawyers for the man pre dicted he would be released. The suspect’s name was not released. Meanwhile, police inspector lull Abrahamsson said on Swed ish national television, “We are pursuing the investigation as broadly as before and we hope we shall have more arrests." Henning Sjostrom, a leading efense lawyer who is represent- ng the suspect, described the nan as a Swede in bis mid 30s rom Stockholm with no foreign onnections and with an “unble mished record.” Exxon, Chevron to cut spending on exploration Associated Press NEW YORK — Two of the big gest U.S. oil companies announced sharp cuts in exploration spending Thursday, hurt by the petroleum price collapse that analysts warn may leave the country at the mercy of foreign suppliers again. “We’re setting up the next oil cri sis, I think we clearly are,” said Bruce Lazier, who follows domestic oil companies for Prescott, Ball 8c Turben Inc., a New York investment firm. “We will pay the piper down the road.” He and other analysts said they fear the strides made by the United States in reducing.the use of foreign oil will be undermined by a dropoff in the search for domestic oil re serves. New York-based Exxon Gorp., the world’s largest oil company, said it would reduce its capital and explo ration budget by 2b percent from $ 10.8 billion in 1985 to $8 billion this year. San Francisco-based Chevron Corp., the fourth-largest U.S. oil company, announced it would spend about $3.5 billion this year, com pared with about $4 billion spent in 1985. Similar reductions had been an nounced previously by other oil companies. Exxon Chairman C.C. Garvin Jr. said the reductions are largely in re sponse to the sharp decrease in crude oil prices. He also said they represent a re-examination of the company’s strategies. Chevron Chairman George Keller said the lower spending level, re vised after the collapse of the crude oil market began late last year, “re flects the current uncertainty of fu ture crude and product prices.” gency: Carriers ignored orders not to fly Texas All finds itselltj rstdayofi swim mil imming k with 3* with 263, M 150.5, AM h 78.5,1(4 1. Cisna’s cot] 00 vard ltd II four ever,!) Associated Press I WASHINGTON — U.S. military personnel were flown on charter iarriers for some time after the gov- ernment recommended immediate grounding of the aircraf t, a congres sional agency has found. ’ In fact, the General Accounting Office draft report said, the service members rode on the aircraft for months after government inspectors discovered serious safety violations. K These events, involving two char ter carriers, the GAO draft report concluded, “raise a number of ques tions” about the Federal Aviation Administration’s “ability to identify air carrier violations . . . and see that they are remedied in a reasonable period of time.” K The findings involved FAA in spections of Air Resorts, based in Carlsbad, Calif., and South Pacific Island Airways, based in Honolulu. The GAO report was released by Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Ha., a ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee. “In both cases, military personnel were placed aboard charter flights after the FAA inspectors recom mended suspension of the air car- iers’ flight permits,” Bennett said. FAA spokesman Boh Buckhorn said he could not comment because he had not seen the report. Bennett and other congressmen have raised concerns about the safe operation of military charter opera tors since the Dec. 12 crash of an Ar row Air charter in Gander, New foundland, in which 248 U-S. military personnel were killed. According to the GAO draft re port, the examination revealed that FAA inspectors in April 1984 found numerous safety violations at Air Resorts and urged that the carrier immediately be grounded. Air Resorts agreed to ground much of its fleet, but was allowed to continue to fly four aircraft it was us ing to.carry Navy personnel as part of a military contract. During May 1984 alone, Air Resorts carried 2,479 U.S. military personnel, according to the GAO. The GAO report said another military charter carrier, South Pa cific Island Airways; carried 6,400 U.S. military personnel after FAA inspectors in Honolulu recom mended immediate suspension of the South Pacific’s operating certifi cate because of safety violations in early 1984. Lay it on the line. Ask any Navy pilot. It doesn’t come any more thrilling than this. Landing an F-14 on the rolling deck of a carrier at -sea is a challenge that tests the skills of the best. Navy flight training. Navigation. Aerodynamics. It’s the best you can get. But along with the airborne thrills, Navy pilots and flight officers get down-to-earth skills. There is no hoot camp. College graduates get leader ship and management training at Aviation Officer Candidate School. It’s challenge and responsibility. The satisfaction of knowing you’re with a topflight team. You can’t beat the rewards either. 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