The Battalion 87 No. 102 CISFS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, February 24, 1988 er Welch Uncials jzanneS jeCoadi Martin 'oinas hree abductors f Marine caught Johnson Fraternity BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — The in Shiite Moslem militia has ght three gunmen who kidnap- a U.S. Marine officer serving lh the United Nations, but not the stermind of the abduction, secu- sources said Tuesday. |the United Nations has ap- ached Iran, Syria and the Pales- Liberation Organization, which |ve influence in Lebanon, seeking [ip in the search for Lt. Col. Wil- R. Higgins, U.N. spokesman »Zamorano said in New York. IZamorano said the contacts were de by Undersecretary-General track Goulding, who was in the ion when Higgins was kidnapped Wednesday. The 43-year-old tine from Danville, Ky., is a deco- ed Vietnam veteran and was an le to former U.S. Defense Secre- y Caspar Weinberger. The relatively moderate Shiite mi- aAmal has seized 42 suspects in a clampdown on Shiite fundamental ists since Higgins was abducted near Tyre, 50 miles south of Beirut, an Amal spokesmen said on condition of anonymity. Amal has been the dominant force in predominantly Shiite south Lebanon but is being challenged by Hezbollah, which is loyal to Iran and believed to be an umbrella for Shiite radical groups that hold most of the 25 foreigners missing in Lebanon. Nine Americans now are among the missing foreigners. The hostage held longest is ferry A. Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent of the Associated Press, kidnapped March 16, 1985. A security source, who also would not let his name be used, said those rounded up by Amal include “the three gunmen who seized Col. Hig gins and forced him into the first getaway car.” Three other Shiites held by Amal monitored Higgins’ movements be fore his abduction, sources reported. According to the reports, Amal questioned the suspects but found they did not know the whereabouts of Higgins or the man who planned the operation. Their leader kept his men in the dark, one source said, and “the oper ation was a masterpiece from a pro fessional standpoint.” “The mastermind used five iden tical brown Volvo cars plus two addi tional getaway cars, a white Peugeot and a red Mercedes, in the abduc tion,” he said. “The squads in each car did not know who was in the other cars.” A group calling itself the Organi zation of the Oppressed on Earth said it abducted Higgins and claimed he was a spy for the “satanic CIA.” The U.S. government denied the ac cusation. HfgMg «■ * .... ‘ T 'T 1 ' 1 : .. ^ ^ ■ Sneaky snake Photo by Gary Bean Temina, an animal science major, plays with her ing. Jenny Palter, a journalism major and owner of pet snake, Ayce, in front of the Academic Build- her own snake, looks on. SU must absorb alf of plant cost, ommission rules Space researchers attend conference at A&M ikler laSoroif AUSTIN (AP) — Gulf States tilities’ customers should pay nly about half of the $3.1 billion he company spent to build its iver Bend nuclear power plant,- (the Public Utility Commission (ruled Tuesday. In a 2-1 decision, the commis- ion decided the Beaumont-based [utility had failed to prove the (prudence of $1.5 billion in con- truction costs. “The company simply failed on [its burden of proof,” Commis sioner Jo Campbell said. “They had ample opportunity. They spent money on top of money try ing to prove their case.” GSU will get to spend more money to try to prove its case. The commission’s decision allows GSU to ask for the $1.5 billion in disallowed costs at a subsequent PUC hearing. That upset Assis tant Attorney General Scott Mc- Collough, representing state agencies served by GSU. “At some point we are going to quit litigating this issue and make a final decision,” he said. The nuclear plant decision came as the commission began a series of votes that will decide new rates for GSU, which re quested in November 1986 a $144 million rate increase. After hearing 129 days of testi mony, PUC examiners recom mended an $86.7 million in crease, including a $39.9 million emergency increase granted the financially troubled company last April. The decision-making process continues. A hearing was set for today to hear testimony about ex penses incurred by GSU as a re sult of the rate case. The commission also approved a 13 percent return on equity, down from the 15.25 percent sought by GSU. PUC Chairman Dennis Thomas said the dollar effect of the Tuesday decisions on GSU rates would not be calculated un til later this week. He estimated it would add up to a rate increase less than the $86.7 million recom mended by the examiners. The Tuesday meeting opened with a survival plea from E. Linn Draper, GSU’s chief executive of ficer. “I believe the River Bend nu clear plant was a good decision at the time it was made,” Draper said. “It has been in service for two years. It has operated effecti vely. “I would just encourage you that in this mass of testimony you have heard that you keep in mind the big picture, that our compa ny’s survival really is at stake.” GSU owns a 70 percent share of River Bend, which serves its customers in Texas and Loui siana. The plant’s total cost, in cluding the share owned by Ca jun Electric Power Cooperative, was $4.5 billion. The GSU rate case is the first in which the PUC will determine the prudence of nuclear plant construction costs. Thomas was the dissenter in the 2-1 vote on River Bend costs. Federal judge: Occidental Chemical responsible for Love Canal cleanup NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP) — A federal judge ruled Tuesday that Occidental Chemical Corp. is liable for the cost — estimated at more than $250 million — of cleaning up the Love Canal landfill that became synonymous with environmental di saster. After nine years of deliberations, U.S. District Judge John Curtin said Occidental produced the wastes that created the disaster and stored them in a way that would eventually result in toxic leakage. “It is beyond dispute that OCC’s disposal practices were at least par tially responsible for the release, or threatened release, of the chemicals from the Love Canal landfill,” Cur tin said. Curtin said Occidental’s liability would be determined in further court proceedings involving claims against Occidental by other parties, including the state of New York and some residents. Occidental spokesman James Green said the company was disap pointed by the ruling and would not comment on its plans until its attor neys had a chance to study Curtin’s 36-page decision. “At last somebody has been as signed some responsibility,” said Sis ter Marjeen Hoffmann, director of the Ecumenical Task Force which has been an advocate for people in the Love Canal neighborhood. Curtin’s ft|iling upholds the fed eral Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liabil ity Act of 1980, which the judge said was designed to compel the waste disposal industry “to correct its past mistakes and to provide a solution for the dangers posed by inactive abandoned waste sites.” The law was passed 27 years after Occidental yielded ownership of the landfill, transferring it to the Niag ara Falls School Board. Occidental, formerly Hooker Chemical and Plastic Co., contended that it was not responsible for the site after 1953 when it sold the prop erty to the school board, which built a school on the grounds. Occidental said the construction broke a clay seal on the dump and al lowed the chemical^ to leak into the environment. The company ac knowledged dumping 20,000 tons of chemical wastes into the canal dur ing the late 1940s and early 1950s. Martin Littlefield, assistant U.S. attorney for the Buffalo district, said the decision was “a great victory for the state because it means companies are indeed responsible for what they’ve done in years past.”. Littlefield said Occidental would be liable for the “bottom line” on the cleanup costs. He said, however, the ruling allows Occidental to sue other parties the chemical giant contends should share the responsibility. Nunzio Loverdi, president of the Love Canal Environmental Action Committee, said, “I think Occidental should accept the decision and not take action against the city and School Board because if it does we will all suffer. We want to get on with our lives and put this behind us.” Ten years ago, Love Canal be came synonymous with environmen tal disaster when state officials or dered an evacuation of children and pregnant women from the area be cause of leaking chemicals. Reagan chooses nominee for secretary of Navy position WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan on Tuesday picked a veteran Capitol Hill infighter, Wil liam L. Ball III, to step into a sim mering dispute over Pentagon bud get cuts as his new secretary of the Navy. The White House said the presi dent will nominate Ball, a former Capitol Hill aide who has been chief lobbyist for both the State Depart ment and the White House, to suc ceed James Webb, who resigned as Navy secretary on Monday with a blast at Secretary of Defense Frank C. Carlucci. “We look to Will Ball to continue working aggressively for a strong U.S. Navy,” White House spokes man Marlin Fitzwater said, noting Webb’s charge that Carlucci had needlessly sacrificed the administra tion’s goal of a 600-ship fleet. Fitzwater said the administration still seeks a 600-vessel Navy, but now expects the goal to be reached in fis cal year 1992, instead of in fiscal 1989 as originally planned. Ball, 40, a soft-spoken Southerner who came to Washington as an aide to former Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., has a reputation for skill at behind-the-scenes compromises and maneuvers needed to steer legis lation through Congress. Ball has been assistant to the pres ident for legislative affairs since Feb ruary 1986. Before that he had been assistant secretary of state for legis lative and intergovernmental affairs. By Jeff Pollard Staff Writer With the space shuttle Challenger isaster of 1986 slowly fading into ie past, researchers are busy work- on the necessary technology that help NASA achieve future mis- on goals and take the space pro ram into the 21st century. Many of lose researchers were at Texas &M Monday and Tuesday for the antrolled Environmental Life Sup- lort Systems (CELSS) Research onference. Sponsored by the Space Research enter at A&M, the conference was leant to bring together researchers |ith varying backgrounds and give em an overview of current re arch going on at the interdiscipli- ry level. Oran Nicks, director of the Space Research Center, told participants 'at it was up to university research ams, under the direction of NASA, do the basic research, and indus- must take these developments nd put them to practical use. “Universities are best suited for ie research because they are on the utting edge of science where all of he changes occur,” Nicks said. They can dream and be creative nd even make mistakes without the utcomes causing any great dama- ;e.” Nicks said NASA had fallen into a dormant period when research was de-emphasized and allowed to dete riorate. He said universities had fallen into a survival mode and were just now starting to pull out. “We’re in the dawning of a new space age,” Nicks said. “We’re looking past just a space station to return trips to the moon and a manned mission to Mars.” Government officials from NASA to President Reagan’s office have recognized the need to expand U.S. commitment in space and have es tablished programs to meet this need. In the budget submitted to and recently approved by the Presi dent’s Office of Management and Budget, NASA set aside $100 mil lion dollars in 1989 and over $1 bil lion through 1993 for the Path finder Initiative to be run by the Office of Aeronautics and Space Technology (OAST) at NASA. Peggy L. Evanich, program direc tor in the propulsion, power and en ergy division of OAST and keynote speaker at the conference, explained that Pathfinder is a technology de velopment program that will focus on human survival in space for ex tended time periods. “With the renewed interest in a lu nar base and a mission to Mars,” Evanich said, “Pathfinder will focus on producing deliverable technology within the next five years, giving of ficials the information needed to de cide on the next mission beyond the space station.” Part of the Pathfinder Initiative will be devoted to the development of life support systems and the inte gration of CELSS research already under way. Evanich said the end product will be a life support system that operates independently and combines chemical/physical proc esses with biological processes to form a man-made biosphere. She said a new’ system of technol ogy development is required to reach Pathfinder goals. The system should begin with a computer proc ess simulation, proceed through sub system and system development and then go through laboratory vali dation before the technology is re ady to be used. “We’re not looking to build hard ware through Pathfinder that is going to be obsolete before it can be used,” Evanich said. “We want to have the technology ready when these things that we’re talking about, like a lunar base, are ready to be do ne.” The rest of the two-day confer ence was made up of paper presen tations by academic and NASA re searchers from across the country. Primary emphasis was on biologi cally based systems, with a secondary emphasis on physical/chemical proc esses and system modeling. Dr. Kamel H. Fotouh, chairman of the chemical engineering depart ment at Prairie View A&M Univer sity, presented his senior class’s pro ject — Production of Breathable Air on Mars. Fotouh said that his stu dents designed systems to remove solid particles from the Martian air, convert the Martian air into breatha ble air and to search for possible un derground water pockets to be used in the production of air. They also made a general time line for the es tablishment of a Mars base. “The establishment of a Mars col ony will involve three phases: A sur vival stage, when the primary con cern will be with air, water and food; A self-sufficiency phase, when chemicals, fuels, pharmaceuticals, polymers and metals are produced; and a production and export phase, when items such as enzymes, chrys- tals and radiation resistant materals will be sent back to Earth.” Fotouh suggested that w r e know how to get to Mars but we do not know how to stay there longer. “Eve ryone has their own definition of a design but each thinks that his is the best,” he said. “We must combine our designs to get 100 percent effec tiveness.” Other papers involved the use of plants and plant growth in a con tained environment. Plants are a big part of the biological life-support system idea. They act as an oxygen producer and as a source of food and comfort on long missions. Alice Eichold, a NASA Graduate Student Research Fellow from Yale University, reasons that if you ex pect a human to take on an 18 to 36 month space flight you must build the spacecraft from the inside-out, putting flight crew comfort and con venience above outer structure. “By creating a plant growth fa cility with human interaction capabi lities, the plants act as a psychologi cal boost to the crew,” Eichold said. “The plants benefit the humans and the humans, at the same time, bene fit the plants.” Clearly, it will require a combina tion of physical/chemical systems and biological systems to create a closed-loop life support system that can be used over a long period of time, and the research will take time. “We hope to have both a closed- loop physical/chemical process and a closed-loop biological process de signed by 1994,” Evanich said. “Then we can integrate the two and have a physical/chemical/biological process that we can test in the space station by 1998.” Professor dies after heart attack Abdel Ayoub, a 60-year-old electrical engineering professor who had been at Texas A&M for • 20 years, died Saturday of a heart attack. Ayoub was in the emergency room of St. Joseph hospital when the attack occurred. His wife, Odessa, said Ayoub was taken to the hospital because of a chest pain but, she said, there was no indication of a heart problem un til the attack occurred. Mrs. Ayoub said doctors examined her husband and initially found noth ing wrong, but Ayoub had the fa tal heart attack after the examina tion, while he was still in the hospital. Mrs. Ayoub said her husband had suffered from a heart problem for five years. This semester, Ayoub was tea ching an electrical circuit theory class, a course he taught for the past three semesters. The electri cal engineering class is required for all electrical engineering and nuclear engineering majors. Chanan Singh, an electrical en gineering professor and friend of Ayoub’s, said Ayoub was also in volved with research in power systems reliability and electrical machines. His specialization was power systems, Singh said. Singh said Ayoub always seemed to enjoy spending his time with students. “He really liked to work with students and he cared about them,” Singh said. “He was a nice person.” Eric Gusfafson, a senior electri cal engineering major who took Ayoub’s class, said Ayoub played an important role in many stu dents’ academic careers. “He had a lot of influence in their curricula and education,” Gustafson said. “He influenced a lot of people’s decisions.” Funeral services were held in College Station and he was buried at a Moslem cemetary in Houston Sunday. Ayoub is survived by his wifq and sons who live in Houston.