p^ni_ TexasA&M m ■ i • The Battalion Dl. 82 No. 165 CJSPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, June 24, 1986 l^fWaiter saw . ..death of jlinghoffer t houghs mav I ug med had tak ting th; til. Tu Comm iodine, h his tin u< COlp fcDonak ir at Tk The Bit : their li Ige toda' i. The ji lation at * mav wi or pans date. 1 baskethi rs. Brown, t , 1974-75 T), at the; , died on , during RiENOA, Italy (AP) — A ship’s waiter testified Monday that Leon Kllighoffer was silent as his wheelchair was pushed across the deck, of the Achille Lauro to a wailing Palestinian hijacker armed with an automatic rifle. Two shots were fired, Manuel ie [Souza said, then he and the :rujse liner’s hairdresser, Ferruc- , H| Alberti, were ordered to Sudip the 69-year-old American’s bod\ and his wheelchair into the Mediterranean Sea. Kpfhe Portuguese waiter told udge Lino Monteverde he could ’entify the man who summoned im from the dining room, where the|hostages were held, and or dered him to bring Klinghoffer out. De Souza pointed out Youssef id al-Molqi, who listened Tom behind the steel bars of his helping cage in the chamber built like a bunker beneath a Genoa courthouse. C’-The trial indictment describes Molqi, 23, as the leader of the four Palestinians who seized the ship Oct. 7 off Port Said, Egypt, and subjected nearly 400 hos tages to two days of terror at sea. It pilso says Molqi was the man who killed Klinghoffer with two bullets from a Kalashnikov as sault rifle, one in the head and one in the chest. Molqi, who confessed to the killing in pre-trial testimony, claimed in court last week that he did not kill Klinghoffer and that the American was not even .aboard the ship. : Monteverde, who is presiding at die trial of 15 men charged in the hijacking, asked the waiter through an interpreter whether the invalid New Yorker said any thing as de Souza wheeled him across the deck. vNo,” he replied. It was the fourth day of the trial in this , re str j c |( t! northern port city, where the Achille Lauro began its Mediter- , ( l ranean cruise. ■dical autlwi Alberti, the hairdresser, said • nt types' he could not identify the hijacker, adding: “I didn’t even look him in the face.” & De Souza said he went inside ^’again to clean the blood caff his clothes, and Alberti testified that so left, but was forced to re- e asked Alberti d pick the hi- Hvhen the judg Tlether he couh *er out from among the five eft ndants in the room, he shook is head. South Africa drops four treason charges JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Prosecutors dropped charges Monday against the last four defendants in a treason case, without explanation. Sixteen anti-apartheid activists originally were charged in the case, and Monday’s action appeared to mark the total collapse of the case. Michael Imber, Natal attorney general, gave no reason for drop ping charges against Thozimile Gq- weta, president of the South African Allied Workers Union, and union leaders Sisa Njikaleni, Sam Kikini and Isaac Ngcobo. They were accused of high trea son for allegedy furthering the Afri can National Congress guerrilla campaign against President P.W. Botha’s government. The treason trial began in Octo ber in Pietermaritzburg in Natal province. Charges were dropped in November against the 12 other activ ists arrested in May 1985, including top leaders of the United Demo cratic Front anti-apartheid coalition. The Bureau of Information, the only source of official data under the emergency, said two mines were found Sunday on farm roads in northern Natal and detonated safely by bomb experts. The African Na tional Congress has claimed respon sibility previously for planting mines in farming areas of Transvaal Prov ince, north of Natal, that killed seve ral whites and blacks in recent months. In Johannesburg, the Citizen newspaper said officials feel unrest has diminished under the emer gency and it should be continued in definitely. It attributed the report to government sources it did not name. Newsweek correspondent Rich ard Manning was told to leave South Africa, apparently because of a Newsweek cover story called “South Africa’s Civil War.” He was the sec ond foreign journalist ordered out under the emergency. CBS News cameraman Wim de Vos, a Dutch citizen, was expelled last Thursday. Home Minister Stof- fel Botha gave no reason for or dering Manning to leave by mid night Thursday, apart from telling him, “I have considered it to be in the public interest to order your re moval from the republic.” Botha said Newsweek had until 10 a.m. Thursday to appeal. Reagan’s request for Contra speech refused by House WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan asked Monday to ad dress the House on the eve of its vote on his request for aid to Nicaraguan rebels, but House Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill Jr. denied the request, saying it would be an “unorthodox procedure,” virtually unprece dented in peacetime. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan was “deeply disappointed” that he would not be accorded the opportunity to make a final appeal for his $100 million aid package, scheduled for a House vote Wednesday. Speakes said White House chief of staff Donald T. Regan had called O’Neill Monday afternoon to ask if the president might deliver a speech to the chamber Tuesday before leav ing for a speech in Las Vegas and a week’s vacation at his California ranch. O’Neill offered the president an opportunity to appear before a joint session of Congress, which he said would be more appropriate. The speaker said that in so doing, he was continuing “my practice of support ing any presidential request to ad dress ajoint session of the Congress.. . . I offered President Reagan the opportunity to do so tomorrow (Tuesday), just as I have done upon every such presidential request.. . . “I was told by Mr. Reagan that the White House did not want the presi dent to address a joint session, that the White House wants the presi dent to appear before a regular meeting of the House,” the statement added. “In 1969, Presi dent Nixon appeared sequentially before both Houses on the eve of the Vietnam War protests to thank members for supporting his conduct on the war.” O’Neill said, “Having the presi dent appear before only one House to lobby for a legislative proposal would be unprecedented. The only justification for such an unorthodox procedure would be if the president would use the occasion to participate in open dialogue with members of the body. A formal address should properly be made before ajoint ses sion.” He said that his offer for a joint session remains open. “On Wednesday, the House votes on Contra aid for the third time this year,” he said. “If the House passes Contra aid in any form, the Senate will have to act on the matter. Since future congressional action must oc cur in both houses, I believe that the proper forum for an address is the traditionaljoint session.” Presidential addresses to a single house of the Congress are extremely rare. Speakes said his research showed only a half-dozen or so cases in which a president had gone be fore the House. Most of the cases he cited involved cases in which U.S. troops were in combat. The House vote on aid to the re bel counter-revolutionaries known as Contras is expected to be very close. Speakes said Monday the White House was still a few votes short of victory. Speakes said O’Neill, a steadfast opponent of Reagan on the issue, declined the president’s request in a telephone conversation with Regan, saying he did not want the issue “politicized.” The spokesman said he did not know whether that word was O’N eill’s or Regan’s. Comment from the speaker’s office was not immediately available. High Five Photo by Tom Ownbey Two intramural co-rec softball players celebrate a victory Monday afternoon. The games scheduled from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. were cancelled because of rain and will be made up on Wednesday. n charged in Kerrville case termed ‘loving’ KERRVILLE — A an charged with organized crime as always loving and respectful and nt money to his divorced mother, he woman testified Monday in his Organized crime trial. Betty Vreeke said her 21-year-old an, Carlton Robert Caldwell, had "ouble adjusting to her divorce rom his father. But he never under went any personality change because of the breakup, she said. Caldwell, Walter Wesley Elle- bracht Sr., 55, and Walter Wesley El- lebracht Jr., 33, are charged with vi olating the state’s organized crime law in the March 1984 death of drifter Anthony Bates. The state contends the Ellebrachts picked up hitchhikers and took them to their Hill Country ranch with the promise of work, forcing them to stay against their will. The prosecution also alleges Bates was tortured to death with an elec tric cattle prod before his body was doused with gasoline and burned. Charred human bone fragments were found in a burned-out spot on the ranch, witnesses have testified. Tape recordings of alleged tor ture sessions have been played dur ing the trial. One witness identified Caldwell’s voice as being among those on the tapes. Vreeke, who testified as a defense witness as the trial’s ninth week be gan, said she and her former hus band adopted Caldwell when he was 2 years old. When the youngster was a teen-ager, she and her husband di vorced. Caldwell entered the Army for 10 months and was discharged “be cause there was trouble with adjust ment,” she said. During his military stint, Vreeke said her son sent her $200 a month so she wouldn’t have to work full time. The emergency has imposed un precedented restrictions on journal ists. An Anglican priest in a white par ish said he faces prosecution if he does not evict blacks who took ref uge in his church after their shacks were burned down at the Crossroads squatter camp outside Cape Town. The Rev. Geoff Quinlan said by telephone from All Saints Church in a Cape Town suburb that he was given a summons for allegedly vio lating the law that prohibits blacks from living in white areas. Attorney says TDC is not abiding by court order HOUSTON (AP) — The Texas prison system should be held in con tempt because it is not living up to court-ordered reforms designed to improve inmates’ living conditions, an attorney said Monday. “They have persistently violated the court order,” said William Ben nett Turner, an attorney for the in mates. “It’s a sad record.” Turner and attorneys for the state returned to court in a hearing to de termine if the state should be held in contempt of the sweeping reforms ordered by U.S. District Judge Wil liam Wayne Justice. The hearing is expected to con tinue through the week. In 1981, Justice ruled that condi tions in the Texas Department of Corrections violated the U.S. Consti tution’s protection against cruel and unusual punishment. TDC officials in May 1985 signed an agreement intended to end court room battles in the lawsuit, filed in 1972 by inmate David Ruiz. But Turner later filed a contempt motion claiming the state has failed to live up to many of the promises it made to improve living conditions for prisoners. The motion claims seven areas of noncompliance including a failure to fully separate violent and non-vio lent inmates, a lack of basic neces sities such as showers and outdoor recreation yards for high-security in mates and an inadequate medical staff. Although prison officials con ceded they had not yet complied with all the mandated reforms, they said improvements have been made. “We have done an absolutely fan tastic job of complying with court or ders,” TDC Board Chairman A1 Hughes said after Monday morn ing’s hearing. F. Scott McCown, an assistant to Attorney General Jim Mattox, said the state is working hard to comply, but added that some changes take more time that others to implement. A lack of money and other factors has also slowed the process, McCown said. “It’s a tremendous management problem,” said McCown, who drew criticism from Justice when he said prison officials have had “only four years” to implement reforms. “Only four years, I don’t much like that sound,” Justice said. “That’s a long time — four years.” t 22 SD! team briefed on A&M's research capability 9 e Sts By Olivier Uyttebrouck Staff Writer Sondra Pickard Senior Staff Writer •J Bpe head of the Strategic Defense nitiative program and a team of Dl staffers were briefed in the exas A&M Board of Regents hamber Friday in what amounted 3 an appeal for SDI research funds ■ ,iy A&M scientists and administra- I’ Sen. Phil Gramm accompanied Lt. >en. James Abrahamson, head of ie program, and a team of SDI affers. y In a press conference prior to the npryriefing, A&M President Frank E. DP J'o andiver thanked Gramm for \/p||g| rin gi n g Abrahamson to Texas, giv- S * * ^ tg A&M the opportunity to “show ur wares.” “I think it is important that uni- srsities are involved in this kind of ^search,” Vandiver said. In the briefing, five A&M re- ' :arch scientists made presentations utlining several aspects of work erfprmed here including space re tard!, molecular electronics, elec- o-optics, manufacturing systems ad accelerator science. At the press conference, some of Senator challenges critics on fairness of tax plan Photo by Anthony S. Casper From left, A&:M President Frank Vandiver, Sen. Phil Gramm and Lt. Gen. James Abrahamson. the major grievances critics have with SDI research at universities were addressed by Gramm, Abra hamson, Vandiver and Board of Re gents Chairman David Eller. In response to a question concern ing the classified nature of SDI re search and the scientist’s ability to publish findings, Abrahamson said the great majority of work available for universities is unclassified and should remain so. Some of the research will be classi fied, he said, but only with the re searching scientist’s permission and foreknowledge. Gramm and Vandiver addressed a number of their remarks to the op position SDI research faces by a See SDI, page6 WASHINGTON (AP) — On the eve of a Senate vote on a land mark tax-revision plan, Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III challenged critics who claim the bill shortchanges middle-income Americans. “It’s true that they get less of a tax reduction than lower-income Americans,” Baker said Monday. “It’s really not true that they get a significantly lower reduction than upper-income Americans.” The dispute over relief for middle-income taxpayers will cost the bill the unanimous vote that leaders of both parties had once predicted. Sen. Carl Levin, D- Mich., announced Monday he will vote no because “this bill gives us some reform, but it also gives us some new unfairness.” Baker, appearing on NBC- TV’s “Today” show, noted esti mates that people with incomes between $30,000 and $40,000 a year would get tax cuts averaging 5 percent under the bill, while those above $200,000 would re ceive a 4.7 percent cut. “I think that’s not really a valid objection,” he said. The Treasury secretary, who has worked closely with the House and Senate as they wrote their differing tax bills over the last year, said “the president likes the Senate bill pretty well.” “All in all, I think it is a very, very good bill and we like it a lot,” Baker said. “We wouldn’t mind seeing it passed as is.” That is expected to happen, sometime after 4 p.m. today, when the vote on the overall bill is scheduled. “It’s going to be a big, big win — almost unanimous,” Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan said. The Senate was working its way through a stack of minor amendments Monday to clear the way for the final vote. Senate passage would send the bill to a conference committee, which will work out a compro mise between the Senate version and the one passed last December by the House.