3 ><“01 n to c as-Sa-i ft) to “ C l (O'* (t) (/I . f» ()) Q. ® 5 r» ^■2.53: ^.0) D) 2.V Q) (5 SrSl C * " nt rt) 01 ? 5 Zllli I§ i 'c o n ,: ^ 3 lr, J '■: "0 3 ft) o ^5' r i'i 0 ■ o S>Uai 1 < !? c: ft) a 2,3; I pi l nnv Texas A&MV**% m M « # The Battalion Voi. 82 No. 169 CJSPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Friday, June 26, 1987 ErS 3- 2.5i (s -i 3 Q. 5-4 a o ^ (3 D 3 3 fficial tells f deception In Iran affair jBvASHINGTON — An assistant Itcrney general testified Thursday tha senior administration officials prepared false testimony to deceive ■ Congress as the Iran-Contra affair was unraveling in November but that President Reagan expressed I mplete surprise” on learning de- i of the affair. it a meeting of top-level Reagan dais, Charles Cooper told the ate and House Iran-Contra com- Itees that Lt. Col. Oliver L. North Isonally rewrote CIA Director liam Casey’s already incorrect o :: “So the point of it till is we iTad a group of people . . . p! who were deliberately de riving . . . about the in volvement of the United ffoites in the shipment of ■ese missiles in Novern- H 3" ft) 3 s 'Sis ft> r»D. i h\ »r of 1985, isn’t that a ft -, S<: B"i gc.: < <■ ■0 ^ §*: ■0 j: fact?” ; h- Rep. Bill McCollum, R- Fla., questioning Charles Wpoper, assistant attorney general iroposed congressional testimony, leightening the deception. Kooper said then-National Secu rity Adviser John Poindexter and Key himself raised no objection to the change. 6\t one point, the hearing pro- (Kced this riveting exchange be tween Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., and the Justice Department official. McCollum: “So the point of it all is we had a group of people, at least three of them, and possibly four in Col North, Adm. Poindexter, Mr. (Robert) McFarlane and probably Hector Casey, who were deliber ately deceiving and lying to the at torney general of the United States about the involvement of the United States in the shipment of these mis siles in November of 1985, isn’t that a fact? 1 1 think it is,” Cooper replied, ooper, 35, indicated he was con- d at first, then shocked to the it of considering resignation as lug deeper into the Iran-Contra irat the behest of Attorney Gen- Edwin Meese III. lis testimony about men who ed at the highest levels of gov- nent was stated quietly, but it was xplosive as any heard in nearly, n weeks of the nationally tele- d Iran-Contra hearings. —./hen Casey delivered his testi- ^tnony to the Senate Intelligence FEommiuee, the day after the meet ing Cooper described, it did not in clude the disputed part — a sentence that claimed no one in the U.S. gov ernment knew that arms had been sent to Iran in the fall of 1985. However, that single sentence, a blatant attempt at a cover-up, caused a chain reaction of consternation, with State Department legal adviser Abraham Sofaer threatening to re sign if Casey gave it as written and with Secretary of State George Shultz' confronting Reagan about it that night at the White House. On the following morning, Fri day, Nov. 21, the president ordered Meese to begin an immediate investi gation of administration involve ment in the Iran-Contra affair and to report back on Monday. At the very start of the probe, on Saturday, a Meese aide found in North’s files a memo that revealed that profits from the arms sales had been diverted to the Nicaraguan re bels. It was the first solid evidence of that activity. The president’s reaction to the news, as described by Meese who told him on Monday, was “one of. . . complete surprise,” Cooper said. That account is in line with Rea gan’s oft-repeated contention that he knew nothing of any such diver sion before being told by Meese. Cooper said North was questioned about the diversion in Meese’s office that November weekend and was asked if Reagan knew about it. “He said he didn’t know, he didn’t think so, he didn’t think the presi dent had ever read the memo or any memo like it or that the president had been briefed on this,” Cooper testified. North, Poindexter, former Na tional Security Adviser McFarlane and other officials were questioned during the weekend, but Cooper said Meese did not order White House records sealed until after Reagan announced what was going on in a televised appearance Mon day. Other witnesses’ testimony has shown that North, his secretary Fawn Hall and possibly others al tered, destroyed and removed piles of records during that weekend, and Meese has been criticized for not sealing things off and beginning a formal Justice Department investi gation much sooner. Hefty, Hefty, Hefty Michael Gerick, a senior majoring in mechanical engineering from Victoria, strains to pull some weights toward him in a pull-to-chest Photo by Sarah Cowan exercise. Gerick is in the Texas A&M Weightlifting Club and lifts weights with friends in the mornings after class. Presidential hopeful Biden to LULAC: U.S. needs less materialistic society CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — Presi dential candidate Sen. Joseph Biden, in a campaign appeal to a primarily Hispanic audience Thursday, pro moted a new commitment to social programs and called for a less materialistic society. “For too long in this country, it is my view than we have celebrated in dividualism over community,” Biden said at the national convention of the League of United Latin American Citizens. The 44-year-old senator irom Delaware is one of nine presidential candidates addressing the conven tion this week. “In this America, the standard has been wealth, economic success and personal gain — the so-called bot tom line — but this standard cannot evaluate the true condition of our society,” he said. He admitted to the group that he does not speak Spanish, but said a movement to make English the offi cial U.S. language “will never make it through my (Senate Judiciary) committee, I can promise you.” The U.S. economy is dependent on the health of markets in the de veloping world, he said. “If we had leadership in this coun try that could get our European al lies and the Japanese to do their part and us to do our part in improving the economy of Mexico, we would do more to impact upon our ability to make this country function than anything else,” Biden said. U.S. banks, he added, should write off interest and renegotiate the debt owed them by Third World countries. “It is not a U.S. economy,” he said. “It is a world economy.” About 3,500 people are expected through Sunday to attend the con vention. Biden said the Hispanic vote will be an important factor in the 1988 election, and if nominated he would consider a Hispanic vice presidential running mate. Democrats call protection of Kuwaiti ships ‘unnecessary’ WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress’ Demo cratic leaders drafted a resolution Thursday that called President Reagan’s plan to protect 11 Kuwaiti oil tankers in the Persian Gulf un necessary but stopped short of asking Reagan to abandon the policy. Meantime, Republicans blocked a vote in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on three measures offered in an attempt to find a consensus on the issue. Kuwaiti tankers are a key means of transporting oil to the West andJapan. One would reverse Reagan’s decision to place the Kuwaiti ships under the American flag and protect them with U.S. naval power. Another would trigger the 1973 War Powers Act that limits a president’s ability to commit forces to situations of imminent danger. A third would extend U.S. protection only to American-owned ships in the gulf. The Democratic resolution was drafted at a closed meeting of Democratic leaders from the House and Senate and later considered by the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The resolution says Reagan’s “planned re flagging of 11 Kuwaiti tankers is unnecessary for the protection of United States interests in the Persian Gulf’ but also concludes that “nei ther proceeding with reflagging nor with drawing the proposal advances United States interests.” That measure couldn’t be voted on by the Foreign Affairs Committee because Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla., the chairman, told his colleagues that more work was needed to write a measure that all could support. Many in Congress fear that Reagan’s pro gram would draw the United States into the GVa-year-old I ran-Iraq war because Kuwait has provided aid and facilities to Iraq. House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, said the Democrats were seeking a broad-based measure that Republicans could support. He said congressional leaders would ask to meet with the president next week to discuss the is sue. upreme Court bars ex-soldier from suing federal government Suit alleges LSD tests given without soldier's knowledge 1 WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court, in a case that dis senting justices said evokes mem ories of Nazi atrocities, on Thurs day barred a former soldier given LSI) without his knowledge from Suing the federal government ■ and its agents. By a 5-4 vote, the court said the broad immunity from lawsuits enjoyed by the military leaves the soldier — who said his life nearly I'as ruined by the secret chemical arfare tests — without legal re course. About 1,000 members of the rmed forces took part unwit- Ifiagly in the tests during the 1950s. In the LSD case, Justice Anto- in Scalia said for the court that permitting the lawsuit “would dis- upt the military regime.” He was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Jus- ices Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis F. Powell and Byron R. White. In a bitter dissent, Justice Wil iam J. Brennan said the govern- ent’s conduct reminded him of iazi doctors who treated humans like laboratory animals in con ducting medical experiments. Brennan was joined by Justices Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor dissented in a separate opinion. The case involved former Mas ter Sgt. James B. Stanley, 53, who volunteered in February 1958 to take part in a program at the Army’s Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. Informed of Thursday’s rul ing, Stanley said, “Needless to say, I’m stunned.” He warned young people to stay out of the Army unless they are properly in formed about what may happen to them. Stanley was told in 1958 that the purpose of the Army tests was to examine the use of gas masks and other protective clothing against chemical warfare. But the real intent was to ob serve his unwitting reaction to LSD, the powerful hallucinogenic drug that gained popularity in the 1970s. The government was interested, for example, in find ing whether the drugs could be used to force captured soldiers to talk freely. Stanley was given LSD on four occasions. He said the experience nearly destroyed him. He returned to active duty at Fort Knox, Ky., after the experi- mentss and continued to have hallucinations. He said on one oc casion he awoke from sleep late at night and violently beat his wife and children and later was unable to recall the incident. Stanley first learned about the LSD experiments in December 1975, when Army officers told him they wanted to do a followup study of those given the drug nearly 18 years earlier. In other decisions as it neared the end of its 1986-87 session, the court: Gave military officials broad new power to prosecute members of the armed forces for crimes unrelated to military duty. The 6- 3 ruling cleared the way for the court-martial of a Coast Guardsman charged with sex ually assaulting two young girls in A 1 ci c k ca Ruled, 5-4, that the U.S. Olympic Committee has the legal authority to bar a homosexual rights group in San Francisco from sponsoring an athletic com petition called the Gay Olympics. Gave federal law enforce ment officers new protection from lawsuits when they conduct searches of homes without a court warrant. The 6-3 ruling in a Min nesota case said FBI and other federal agents may not be sued for conducting unlawful searches if they believed they were not vio lating anyone’s rights. Provided a victory for women seeking financial support from men they say fathered their children, ruling that proof of fa therhood need not be “clear and convincing.” The 8-1 decision, in a case from Pennsylvania, upheld a liberal evidence standard used by most states. Upheld the way eligibility for benefits has been calculated since 1984 under the federal Aid to Families with Dependent Chil dren program. Bid to begin inquiry on impeachment sent to House committee AUSTIN (AP) — A bid to launch an impeachment inquiry of Gov. Bill Clements went to a House commit tee Thursday, and a citizens’ group urged Clements to tell all about the Southern Methodist University foot ball scandal. “The people of Texas deserve to know the truth about the involve ment of our highest elected official in this matter,” said John Hildreth, executive director of Common Cause of Texas. “If he fails to do so, I think he betrayed the public trust.” Clements refused to respond. When an SMU question arose dur ing an impromptu news conference, he walked into his office without an swering. Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby, a Democrat, sought to downplay the impeach ment talk that started after a Meth odist bishops’ report indicated Clem ents, as chairman of SMU’s board of governors, tried to cover up the pay- for-players scheme that led to se verest sanctions ever against a colle giate football team. Hobby, who would become gover nor if Clements, a Republican, were ousted, said Thursday he sees no reason to consider such a move. “His administration has been un fortunate for the state, as there have been other unfortunate administra tions, but I see no grounds for im peachment,” he said. Hildreth said the bishops’ report implicating Clements and other school officials raises legitimate ques tions. “The report contains shocking revelations about the callous disre gard of the most elementary con cepts of ethical conduct,” Hildreth said. In the House, the State Affairs Committee received the resolution by Reps. Paul Moreno, D-El Paso, and A1 Edwards, D-Houston, that calls for an investigation into the possibility of impeachment. Chairman Pete Laney, D-Hale Center, said he wasn’t sure what would happen. Other committee members said a hearing on the resolution should be held. “I think it’s our obligation and duty to do a thorough investigation of all the facts, both pro- an anti-im peachment, and then vote based on the evidence,” said Rep. Debra Dan- burg, D-Houston.