Thursday, April 21, 1988AThe Battalion/Page 15 World and Nation Jr Force releases pictures f ‘secret’ Stealth bomber ■WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air iirce, lifting a decade-long veil of ■crecy, released pictures of its Stealth bomber on Wednesday and iaid the plane would make its first Itesi (light this fall. ■As disclosed in 1985 by former |Sen Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., the ne v long-range strategic bomber re- pembles a big “flying wing” with no fuselage in the middle. ■The Stealth bomber, officially ■signaled the B-2, takes its nick name from the fact it is designed to ; fly without showing up on radar. ■Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman Of the Senate Armed Services Com- nniuee, predicted the bomber “will ■aider obsolete billions of dollars of Soviet investment in their current air (flense.” ■The Air Force said in a statement that it was beginning to lift its se crecy surrounding the plane because of the approach of the maiden flight sometime this fall. Such details as performance char acteristics, crew size and maximum payload remain classified, however, Air Force officials said. Indeed, some of the details about the plane’s design — for example, the placement of the engine exhaust outlets — have been deliberately masked in the artist’s rendering re leased Wednesday, service sources said. The Air Force did acknowledge, though, that its cost estimate for the Stealth bomber program was now being revised. “While the acquisition of 132 B-2 bombers was originally estimated to cost $36.6 billion in 1981 dollars, the Air Force is re-evaluating cost esti mates for the program as a result of current and projected fiscal con straints,” it said. “When that process is completed later this year, the Air Force will re lease those updated figures.” Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., chairman of the House Armed Services Com mittee, described the Air Force’s original cost estimate for the B-2 as “probably unrealistic.” The Northrop Corp., which is building the plane for the Air Force, is known to have suffered some overruns and schedule delays, hav ing written off more than $200 mil lion on the project in recent years. The Air Force declined to give the precise date the first test flight had been scheduled, saying only that it would occur “this fall.” lates double r insurance unsafe gulf .ONDON (AP) — Lloyd’s of [London insurers are charging pice as much to insure ships sail ing the Persian Gulf after U.S. ■d Iranian forces clashed in the waterway earlier this week, a Bpokesman said Wednesday. ■The war-risk premium ■ubled Tuesday to 2 percent, jhespokesman said. For a 14-day jaojage to Kuwait, insurance ■ubled to $200,000 on a $10 hnillion hull. ■“It’s in response to the recent incidents in the gulf,” he said. “I link, the (gulf insurance) rates have moved in fits and starts. If 'ehave one or two weeks without jor incidents, I think they’ll go ■wn again.” TCargo insurance premiums re amed largely unchanged, he Id. ■For voyages to ports of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emi- rates in the southern gulf, the ratt doubled tea 1.5 percent of the value of a hull from 0.75 percent, said the spokesman, who spoke on nmdition of anonymity. ■ihe U.S. Navy sank or dam- aged six Iranian vessels and de stroyed two offshore oil plat forms Monday. Iran claimed it downed a helicopter. Chrysler Corp. reports Lee lacocca earned $18 million during 1987 HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. (AP) — Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee la cocca, America’s highest-paid exec utive in 1986, earned nearly $18 mil lion last year in salary, cash and stock bonuses and options, the automaker reported Tuesday. lacocca’s earnings were part of the $85.2 million in compensation that executives of the No. 3 automa ker took home last year. Chrysler released the figures the day after it opened early contract talks with the United Auto Workers, and union Vice President Mark Stepp blasted the earnings as “an in credible rip-off.” Stepp, who leads union negotia tors in the talks, said in a statement with UAW President Owen Bieber that the executives’ earnings “bla tantly contradict the message they try to send UAW members in their factories and offices.” lacocca’s 1987 earnings of $17.9 million included nearly $13.5 mil lion from exercising stock purchase options granted earlier in the de cade, when Chrysler was recovering from near ruin and its stock was worth a fraction of its present value. lacocca also received $765,890 in salary, $725,000 in cash bonuses, $249,000 in stock bonuses and a stock grant worth nearly $2.7 million when it was issued Dec. 8. The figures were contained in Chrysler’s proxy statement, mailed Tuesday to shareholders. In 1986, lacocca took home $20.6 million, including $9.3 million on exercised stock options. Proxy statements released and compiled later in the year showed he was the nation’s highest-paid exec utive. In all, Chrysler paid out $85.2 million to 2,035 executives in 1987: $77.9 million in cash, more than $1 million in stock bonuses and nearly $6.3 million in retirement bonuses, Chrysler spokesman John Guiniven said. Ford Motor Co. Vice Chairman Harold Poling was the No. 2 earner, receiving nearly $11 million: $808,697 in salary, $2 million in cash bonuses and $8.1 million earned exercising stock options. Roger B. Smith, chairman of Gen eral Motors Corp., topped GM’s earners last year with $2.2 million, including $867,000 in salary, an esti mated $800,000 in stock bonuses, $513,000 in stock options and $56,000 from a savings plan. Executive earnings at Ford and GM were disclosed last week. est German court sentences an for two Beirut kidnappings fiiUESSELDORF, West Germany (AP) — A court convicted Abbas Hamadi on Tuesday of abducting two |Vest Get mans as ransom for his brother, Mohammed, whois accused of hijacking a TWA jetliner. Abbas Hamadi, 29, was sentenced to 13 years in grisbn after being found guilty on all charges of kid napping, coercion and possession of explosives. “I is totally reprehensible to rob two innocent people h their freedom and make them fear for their lives,” Chief Judge Arend said in explaining the sentence he ■This four colleagues meted out to Hamadi. The 13-year term was 18 months longer than the ttosecution requested. The maximum allowed was 15 'ears. Hamadi, who is bearded and wore a sport coat and opep-necked shirt, slumped into his chair after hearing he verdict and remained silent. More than 100 specta- orsimost of them reporters, were in the room. Mohammed Hamadi was arrested at Frankfurt air- )ort Jan. 3, 1987, and Abbas 13 days later, both with explosives in their possession. Mohammed Hamadi is accused in the June 1985 hijacking of a TWAjetliner to Beirut in which a U.S. Navy diver was killed and 39 Americans were held hostage for 17 days. Both Hamadis were living in West Germany at the time of their arrests. After Mohammed Hamadi was jailed, but while his brother was free, two West Ger mans were kidnapped in Beirut: Rudolf Cordes on Jan. 17 and Alfred Schmidt on Jan. 20. Schmidt was released in September, but Cordes re mains a hostage. Arend said the evidence proved Abbas Hamadi was among radical Shiite Moslems who plotted the kidnap pings to try to block Mohammed Hamadi’s extradition to the United States. West Germany has refused extra dition and assigned Mohammed Hamadi’s case to juve nile court for trial. Defense lawyer Eckart Hild said he would appeal and told reporters, “I do not find this judgment at all con vincing.” Abbas Hamadi denied involvement in the kid nappings but admitted storing explosives near his home in Saarland state for his younger brother. Texas A&M University Art Exhibits Presents Beyond the Open Doov Contemporary Paintings from the People’s Republic of China Jllii n w pMmm April 25— May 31, 1988 Rudder Exhibit Hall Monday, April 25 Opening Symposium Contemporary Western Influence in the People’s Republic of China 2:00-4:30 p.m. Rudder Tower Room 701 Reception 4:30-6:00 p.m. Rudder Exhibit Hall Docent tour information 845-8501 Sponsored by ARCO TOWN HALL & K A NM 3 3.3 FM CABLE CALL 764- 2095 PRESENTS ALL AGES! 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