•icp^ TX 75225-0XS8 T exas ASM Vol 82 No. 77 USPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, January 7, 198 7 Congress ‘Watergate’ committees _ WASHINGTON (AF) — A new ~ 00 f r *** tackled a top prionty craadng two Waterfate- •y** to inveatiaatr why the Uaaied State* daadeatinely aoM arm * *o Iran and how tome money gotmd ^ujp^aappoetmg Nicaragua * “Our Am duty in this new Con ffr*** h the restoration of pubix truM in the formulation of American torea^u poh»y." said Sea. Robert C. •yrd. D-W.Va.. the nu^orkv leader an the new Democrat-controlled Sen- aae. at the body opened for business “The Iran mis adventure hat hurt the preatdenry. ntadr a shambles of 'katefieaa foreign pahcy and called atto quetuon just bow our foreign policy it formulated and anpte- mented,* Ryrd said Amtrak starts train service after wreck CHASE, Md. (AF) — Amtrak re stored limhad passenger tram serv ice T n reday past the anr of a deadly wreck, and said its tests found two < nucal signal kghu were working properly and should have prevented the ctdhaaon that killed 15 and in jured more than 170. Amtrak spokesman Clifford Black said SO trains would be permitted to make the run during the day on the busy Northeast Corridor between Washington and New York, rather than the normal BO. Trains were held to 90 mph through the area of (he wreck, tar below the estimated 100 mph at which the 12-car Colonial was travel mg Sunday when it rammed three Conrad diesel engines from behind Partisan tensions already were be coming apparent over the Iran issue and its potential for affecting the 1908 presidential elections, and Sen. Bob Dole. R Kan , now the minority leader in the 100th Congress, urged colleagues not to be consumed by the Iran-Contra matter to the exclu sion of other issues. "There are too many other prob lems. domestic and foreign, prob lems that are not going to go away," Dole said. "They cannot, and should not, be swept aside because of an ob session with the Iranian affair." A few blocks west of the Capstoi. former federal judge Lawrence E. Walsh, appointed last month by a three-judge panel to be independent counsel for the Iran-Contra affair, was settling in at the U S. Court house. Walsh also was to meet with high-ranking Justice Department of ficials. government sources said. The 74-year-old independent counsel, they said, likely will take over a series of separate Justice De partment investigations into various elements of the private support sys tem for the Nicaraguan rebels, merging these efforts with his broad-based investigation Ae Georgetown University Hospi tal. officials said that CIA Director William J. Casey, who appeared be fore congressional committees last month to discuss the Iran-Coutra af fair. remains in stable condition and "continues to convalesce" from Dec. 18 surgery to remove a brain tumor. But the hospital statement ac knowledged. for the first time, that the spy chief "has been expenenciatg speech difficulties and right-sided weakness Both of these functions have been improving slowly since the surgery He has begun radiation therapy which mil continue for a number of weeks for treatment of hu lymphoma " And at the Pentagon. Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger ex pressed doubts that profit* from the tair of U.S. weapons to Iran actually had been provided to the U.S.- barked Contra rebels Weinberger, in an interview with reporters, said. "I think it*s a possi bility" that the money never made it to tne guerrillas At this point, he said, the only evidence that such a transfer took place has been statements by Lt. Col. Oliver L. North to Attorney General Edwin Meese 111. “1 think we’re all assuming that, what he said was true." Weinbei ye-r said of North. "And nobodv knows that yet. I understand the Contras have denied receiving it." North was fired as a National Se curity Council staff deputy on Nor. 25. and he has cited his Fifth Amendment rights against self-in crimination in refusing to give testi mony to congressional committees The Senate began debate on legis lation that would establish an 11 - member Select Committee on Secret Military Assistance to Iran and the Nicaraguan Opposition, and worked toward a compromise catling for the panel to finish its work by Aug. 1. three months earlier than initially prmansnd. . , ,|g fhe House also was preparing »o take up its own Irio'tanon on today to create a 1 Vmember paranH panel to report no later than Oct. 90. • (.OP lawmakers continued to press for public' release of a 159- page report by the Senate I«u-U» grace Committee that sources wud found no evidence that President Reagan knew of the diversion of 'Iran arms sale proceeds rn the Con tras The panel had voted 7-6 not to release the report late Monday Bwri strynglv objected to release of the report, saving it had been vamu/rd' by the administration and that at least one urv lasst find sec- tket had been deleted from the pro posed report » portal h»i Safety i fresh provided no details about their investigation be yond Monday night’s disclosure that the Con rail engineer reported see ing a scon signal and applying his brakes when he approached the main track from a siding The engi neer said be didn’t have bane to stop before pulling onto Use tracks just ahead of the packed, speeding pas senger train NTSB officials refused to say if a ngaml the Conrad engineer had passed earlier directed him so pro ceed or So dow and be prepared to stop. The Con rail engineer reportedly has told investigators that the first signal 1 7 miles from the track junc tion erroneously told him to pro- when be saw the he could not stop in No Way Out qua ing rush of Ohio State linebacker Chris Spielman (3b). Murray had problems with the Buckeye defense ail afternoon as he threw a CxMton Bowl record five intercep tions in the Aggies’ 28-12 kiss to Ohio Sta»e in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 1 Clements says Texas can avoid fines AUSTIN (AF) — Gov.-elect Bill Clements voiced hope Tuesday that Texas may be able to head off a federal judge’s threat to Fine the state up to $800,500 a day for fading to carry out District Judge Wilbam Wayne I ustice on Monday found the state in contempt of court for fading to complete reforms dating back to 1981. He said that unless the improvements were made by Mgrth SI. fines would begin April 1. Assistant Attorney General F. Scott McCown said the fines could toad up to $24 million a month But Clements, who is scheduled to meet with Justice at the judge’s Tyler office on Friday, said through a spokesman that he hopes Justice can be persuaded not to levy the fines. "He believes that Judge Justice wants what ev erybody else wants, and that is to solve the prob lem,” said Reggie Bashur, Clements' press secre tarv. “If it is mown dearly and convincingh to the judge that the state is doing everything it can. then he won’t levy any fines ' *The spokesman said Clements, who wiN take office Jan 20, was reviewing Justice's 100-page order Tuesday and would “reserve judgment on the specifics of the citation until after the (Friday) meeting." The court ordered the reforms — including hiring of more guards and medical personnel — after an inmate sued the Texas Depart mem of Corrections a decade ago over conditions in the nation's second-largest prison system. Justice s latest ruling against the prisons came a year after inmates' lawyers filed a motion con tending that Texas was in contempt of a set tlement it agreed to in Juh 1985 In his ruling. Justice criticized the state for doing very little during the first two years after it agreed to the settlement While most state officials expressed disap pointment with the judge's ruling. Lt (»ov Bill Hobby went further He said Justice carried out an arrogant act that is unfair to Texas. Syrian hostage-taker may be in U.S. illegally eiaht th In- (.RAPEVINE (AF) — A Syrian who held a bo* at gun pc ant for i boors at the Dallas-Fort Worth ternauonal Airport and demanded to be flown to Egypt may have been in the country amgsSy, authorities said Tuesday The 10-year-old boy. Michael (-aruso Jr., who had been snatched from his parents as they stood in line at a Delta Air Lines ticket counter. was released unharmed a ruled with his family. re- Technology shows fat, lean meat in cattle Ultrasound images show yields of By Tricin The use of ultrasound to predict caalr carcass yields is a x<»>d exam ple of technology transfer in action, says Meaner Recto, a lecturer in the Texas AJcM animal science depart 'Ultrasound was first used m hu mans," Recao says “Since then, n has gone from the medical field to the animal torace and veterinary medt- ** -m CHIC Ultrasound was first used in ani mals m detect pregnancy m cows used in sheep to detect multiple fe tuses. he says, so a ewe’s feeding re- gone may be avljuMeii Fi nihlt problems in male animals aha umf wm datecaad aod corrected with the use of ultrasound. Recto says. The trMklei may be viewed with the equipment and monitored until the problem is located. Ultrasound is beginning to “take off" in the area of determining yield grades. Reoo says. Fat thickness, muscle depth and some marbling are visible with an ultrasound ma chine, he says "With this information we are able to determine the qpiaiiti or yield characteristics of that carcass." he •ay*. The process is refativciv easy, he say*. A gel or oil is placed on the ani mal where the observation u to be made and then a transducer, or probe, is placed m the same area. “Once the probe is in place, the machine can be turned on and an image is projected onto the screen." Recto says. "Operating much like sonar, sound waves beamed by the trans ducer through the flesh will acho back as they encounter heavier den si ties of tissue,'* hr Vays. "Lean has more density than fat and bone has more density than 1 “Wc’rr (AOcSi) moving the hardest and the fastest in our work with yield grade determinations " Homer Recio, AScM animal science lecturer Once a suitable image is acquired, it Is placed on a video cassette re corder for later analysis, he says. In the future, he says, interfacing with a computer win make automatic measurement readingv "We (researchers) think that wuhtn five years, the industry wiU have developed a prototype using i >bt so that a mechanical arm will ssfbrp across the kill floor, place a sensor on the hided carcass hang ing from a shackle and determine l ield and quality grade," Recio says. The biggest advantage of ultra sound is the ability to yield grade carcasses before the hide is removed, he says, because it enables meat packers to trim off excess fat before shipping the meat. However, ultrasound does have some disadvantages. Recio says. "Expense and expertise arc the biggest disadvantages to the machi ne!" he says To have the program completely developed and hooked up to a com puter costs about $25,000, he says, although it will pay for itself in the long run. "Some degree of expertise is also in the interpretation of the seen on the screen." Recio At a news conference I uesday af ternoon before he and his family flew to Phoenix, Ana.. Michael said that during the ordeal he pretended he was playing a game called "Guns" with a friend of his. Swivehng in a chair and appear mg at rate with reporters. Micharl asserted that he could have walked away from hu captor at one piMM Fhe hostage incident in die Delta terminal Monday afternoon tempo rarity hahed Deha an travel for about 6,000 people headed imtn or out of Dallas. Rights resumed early Tuesday, shortly after the surrendered at 11:59 p.m. The identified as Solah Another i ler advantage of using ultra sound u that it enables the valise of a live animal to be determined. Recio says. Since it measures fat and the ri- bevc area, and since the carcass weight is given, he says, farmers are able to know which cows are doing best. ..ill' says. However. Recio says. ARM is at the forefront of ultrasound devel opment "Were (ARM) moving the hard est and the fastest m our work with yield grade descrminaoons." he says. suspect'— tc Kas Abou-Kassem. 26. of Damascus was persuaded u» sunender by a fake document and the promise that there would be “shme amicable way tor him to leave the country." air port spokesman Joe Draley said At one point, a Boeing 757 was taken to Gate 10 at the i equeat of the airport's Department of Public Safety, Delta spokesman Henry Conley said Leu Ltmmer. director of public safety at DFW, said Abou-Kassem may be m the United States tBegally The regional director of fra mi gration and Naturalization Service Dallas sasd the agency has no re cords on Abou-Kassem Witnesses said the gunman grabbed Mm tlaei and Fired a shot in (hr criling and threatened him when the child’s father came alter him.