P 1^1 Texas A&M m m V • The Battalion Vol. 82 No. 178 USPS 045360 8 pages 1 College Station, Texas Wednesday, July 15, 1987 Non-Smoking, Please Brayton Firemen Training Field has almost 200 men visiting from 12 Latin-American countries, including Mexico, Venezuela, Guatemala Photo by Sarah Cowan and Columbia. Most of them are here to learn about oil fires in case they encounter these types of tires on drilling rigs. Bomb blasts rock city, kill 63 in Pakistan KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Two car bombs and two other explosions killed at least 63 people and wounded more than 300 Tuesday evening, officials reported. The blasts in a small area of downtown Karachi were almost simultaneous. Witnesses and officials said the powerful car bombs blew passers-by to bits, spattering blood on buildings across the wide street. Police said about 20 vehicles were destroyed by the explosions and subsequent fires. “The situation is very bad,” said Dr. Abdul Karim, head physician at the Jinnah Post-Graduate Hospital in Pakistan’s largest city. “We have declared a state of emergency in the hospitals, and we don’t know what the death toll will be.” Karim and Dr. Abdul Maqquim of Civil Hospital said they had received a total of 63 bodies and 300 injured people, many in critical condition. They said numerous fragments of bodies were not included in deter mining the death toll. No group claimed responsibility, but the city government issued a statement saying: “The explosions appeared to be the work of sab oteurs of foreign origin.” It did not elaborate. Terrorist bombings have killed dozens of people in Pakistani cities this year but these were the first in Karachi, a city of 7 million with a his tory of ethnic and political unrest. Thousands of people gathered outside hospitals. Appeals for blood donors were broadcast through loudspeakers. Pakistan’s official media reported two car bombs. Police and other wit nesses said there also were two smaller explosions, and all four were within 200 yards of each other. Police and soldiers cordoned off the area in the city’s fashionable Sad- dar district. The car bombs exploded shortly after 6:30 p.m. in front of two build ings with ground floor shops and three floors of apartments, police re ported. They said a third bomb went off at a bus stop and the fourth on a nearby footpath. Authorities in Pakistan routinely blame bombings on agents of neigh boring Afghanistan’s communist government, which denies the charges. Pakistan aids and shelters Moslem guerrillas fighting the government in Kabul. About 3.5 million Afghan refu gees have come to Pakistan since So viet military forces entered the coun try in December 1979. About 115,000 Soviet soldiers now are in Afghanistan helping fight the insur rection. There also has been speculation that bombings this year have been the work of Pakistani dissidents op posed to the government of Prime Minister Mohammad Khan Junejo, who rules under the protection of Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-Haq, the president. cFarlane offers rebuttal to North’s testimony WASHINGTON (AP) — Lt. Col. Dliver North concluded six extraor- pinary days in the congressional hot Scat Tuesday and was followed by his former boss, Robert McFarlane, J jvho called North's testimony “pas sionate in delivery” but in major areas untrue. I North was dismissed with a decla- ■ation by the chairman of the House ■ran-Contra committee that his ac tivities were part of a policy “driven by a series of lies” that catapulted President Reagan into his most se- gfious crisis. I “You said these hearings caused Berious damage to our national in terest,” Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., said. “1 wonder whether the damage was caused by these hearings or acts which caused these hearings.” I Although McFarlane asked for the encore appearance to rebut ■North’s testimony, he said, “I don’t pthink Colonel North would ever Hnake a deliberate misstatement or a Hie. l hat leaves only the possibilities r of differing interpretations between us.” I McFarlane testified for three Hiours without the cloak of immunity f|that covered North. McFarlane’s Huccessor, Rear Adm. John Poin- j dexter, will testify when the hearings tesume Wednesday. I McFarlane said that in October ■ 985, North sent him some mem- Htranda that “raised doubts about his Hompliance with the laws. I in structed him, in Colonel North’s A&M officials offer views of North's testimony By Kirsten Dietz Senior Staff Writer Lt. Col. Oliver North — hero, presidential material, “fall guy” or liar? Since North began testimony be fore the congressional Iran-Contra committee, he has been called all of these things. Two Texas A&M officials con nected with military studies say North only followed his superior’s orders when participating in one of the many covert operations nec essary to protect U.S. interest. “I think if you’re going to point the finger, you'll have to point it higher than Oliver North,” Lt. Col. Donald J. Johnson, assistant Corps commandant, says. Dr. Joseph CL Dawson, director of A&M's Military Studies Institute, says, “I really question his back ground at being assigned the tre mendous responsibility he was given. He was a man out of his el ement.” North concluded six days of testi mony Tuesday before the commit tee, which is investigating the chan neling of funds from Iran arms sales to Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Dawson says that, while it remains to be seen if any laws were broken, he believes North will be indicted but not tried. “A real problem at the base of all this is that North was unaware of the various shadings or interpretations of various federal laws,” he says. “Not being aware of breaking the law or believing you’re not breaking the law is not a defense. Even if you’re unaware of the law, you can be in violation of it, or even if you misunderstand the law you can be in violation of it.”. Johnson and Dawson agree that covert operations are nevcssui y and inevitable. “As long as there’s a world, there will be covert operations,” Johnson says. But while covert operations are supposed to be run within the law, he says, “When the law applies, you have to stay within the law. But the law is not going to cover every situa tion.” Dawson says many people have been suprised to learn that, while the covert activities must abide by the law, they do not have to abide by U.S. policy. While many national leaders have said one thing and done another, he says, this instance is surprising, considering the United States’ bitter feelings toward Iran. “For the administration to take any action after publicly condemn ing Iran was probably a mistake and probably a bitter pill for the Ameri can people to swallow,” he says. B) law, the House and Senate in telligence committees are supposed to be informed of all covert opera tions. They say they never were told of the arms-for-hostages deal. Dawson says this policy is “satis factory,” but that the administration can get away with informing the committees after a short-term opera tion by saying there was not enough time to do so before the operation. But this operation continued for more than two years, and the admin istration should have expected to be criticized for failing to inform the committees, he says. Johnson says the policy of inform ing the committees should not al ways be followed, because fewer leaks are possible when fewer people know about the operation. “There are times when certain committees under certain circum stances should not know what’s going on,” he says. words, to fix it,” meaning he wanted compliance with the law. He said North changed two pages and McFarlane thought the episode was ended bul that he later learned the document was revised again “without my knowledge and concur rence.” McFarlane said it was true that “narrow and changing restrictions” of the Boland amendment caused changes in conduct of covert opera tions “but this is a far cry from say ing I and other members of the ad- i ministration authorized what was clearly beyond anyone’s power to au thorize.” And, he said — turning a North phrase back — no plan existed to make North the fall guy if the opera tions were disclosed. McFarlane said it would be in character for North to have thrown himself on a grenade to protect Mc Farlane or his commander in chief, but “Ollie North should not be the fall guy or scapegoat or sacrificial lamb for anyone.” The former national security ad viser wss the first witness to make a reappearance at the televised hear ings. He was questioned only by the senators and representatives on the committee, not by its lawyers. As North’s appearance neared its end, Hamilton, then Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, the Senate committee chair man, denounced North for his activ ities in selling arms to Iran secretly, then turning over some of the prof its for use by the Nicaraguan rebels. “It was painful to all of us to sit here and listen to your testimony,” said Inouye. “It was equally painful that you lied and misled for what you believed to be a good cause.” Earlier in the day, after consider able battling among the 26 commit tee members, North was allowed to give a version of the pro-Gontra pitch he testified he had given more than 100 times during his White House tenure. In his last moments under the hot television lights of the Senate Caucus Room, North had only a short part ing statement thanking “the Ameri can people who have responded with their good wishes and their sup port and their prayers.” The confrontation between North and Robert McFarlane, who for merly was Reagan’s national security adviser, was set up when McFarlane asked to return as a witness to rebut some of North’s testimony that in volved him. itatus on immigration for Nicaraguan aliens uncertain after 1 week BAYVIEW (AP) — Nicaraguan Itliens remain uncertain about their Bmniigration status a week after a Bederal order that apparentlv granted political asylum to people prom the Marxist Central American nation. Last Wednesday, Attorney Gen- ral Edwin Meese III issued the or der barring deportation and grant- png work permits for qualified icaraguans who fear persecution pack home. But on Tuesday, 79 Nicaraguans lemained detained at the Immigra tion and Naturalization Service’s de tention camp in Ba) view, isolated on the coastal prairie about 22 miles north of the Mexican border. | INS officials are waiting, as well, f or further instructions. “Out detention poliev is still the tame until we get some additional uidance from above,” said David [Fumer, INS deputy chief director for the South Texas district based in Harlingen. INS policy includes a bond, usually of S1,000 or more. The alien pays the bond and is released after agreeing to appear before an immi gration officer in the district in which he chooses to reside. “Many of us don't have money for the bond and we're waiting to see if they’ll let us get out without paving a bond or maybe a reduced amount,” said Manuel Salvador Aguilar, 26, from Managua. Salvador, whose bond was set at SI.000, said he fears arrest if he re turns to Nicaragua, because he left the countrv illegallv. Amador said he thinks the attor ney general's order presents him an unexpected opportunity "We think it's magnificent, be cause we consider that Nicaragua has a communist svstem," he said in Spanish. Senate approves $5 billion tax hike; business, individuals to split burden AUSTIN (AP) — The Senate voted Tuesday to raise Texans’ taxes by more than S5 billion, a plan which backers said seeks to split the burden between busi nesses and individuals. Left pending was another $669 million tax increase that would be achieved by keeping the motor fuels tax rate at 15 cents per gal lon instead of rolling it back to 10 cents on Sept. 1. “Nobody here wants to go home and say yes, 1 voted for a tax bill,” said Sen. Bob Glasgow, sponsor of the tax measure. “But . . . we have have got to raise this monev; there’s no alternative. We have got to keep the penitentia ries open. We’ve got to have health care." After nearly seven hours of de bate. senators voted 23-7 for a lengths list of tax and fee in creases — topped bv a S3 billion hike in the state sales tax which would raise the rate from 5‘/i cents to 6 cents on the dollar. “We have struggled with this tax bill as best w ; e can,” Glasgow said, reflecting the continuing deadlock that blocked tax and about a $5 billion tax hike, includ ing the motor fuels increase, but Clements has said he would veto any increase larger than $2.9 bil lion. Glasgow said senators would “Nobody here wants to go home and say yes, I voted for a tax bill. But . . . we have have got to raise this money, there’s no alternative. We have got to keep the penitentiaries open. W T e've got to have health care. ” — Sen. Bob Glasgow, sponsor of the tax bill spending action throughout the Legislature’s regular session that ended June 1. “What we have done is try to write a tax bill, plain and simple, that the House would accept in some form and the governor would accept,” Glasgow D-Ste- phenville. said. Lire House earlier passed pass a motot fuels tax increase later, after other budget issues are resolved. The Senate passed a similar fuels tax increase in the regular session. The tax bill which won appro val Tuesdav would raise a total of $5.25 billion and is headed for a conference committee with the House, Glasgow said. As passed by senators, the bill also would expand the sales tax to cover motor vehicle repairs, in terstate long distance phone calls and custom computer software, and would increase a variety of fees, including those for drivers’ licenses and many professional li censes. It would have businesses pre pay part of their 1990 corporate franchise tax; charge businesses for sales tax permits; raise the motor vehicle sales-rental tax; in crease the tax on cigarettes and tobacco products; increase the hotel occupancy tax and place a surtax on the insurance premium tax companies now pay, as well administrative insurance services. To improve the state’s cash flow, the bill also would double the current $7.75 auto safety in spection fee. but make it good for two years instead of one.