The Battalion | Vol. 1 No. 188 6 Pages tudy gauges IDS in military BaTLANTA (AP) — The largest testing program yet in a specific loup of Americans has found that jusi more than one in 1,000 active- dlty military personnel have been exposed to the AIDS virus, lower thtin among the general population, officials said Thursday, d BThe U-S. Centers for Disease Con- s trol said 2,232 of 1,752,191 people B act i ve duty on April 24 had tested positive for antibodies to the virus which causes AIDS, a rate of 1.3 per 11)00. t HThe Defense Department began il weening for AIDS exposure in Jan- t Bry 1986. j B^he active-duty personnel AIDS . Hfection rate “probably underrepre sents the . . . prevalence in the civil- §an population for three reasons,” the CDC said. I. ■ Those reasons are: homosexual > men and injectable drug abusers are, P [bfccause of rules, less common | s among military personnel than in He general population; hemophilia n B ; hms are not eligible for military I Hrvice; and military recruits who Hst positive for AIDS infections are — not enlisted. Federal health officials have esti- lated that 1.5 million Americans le infected with the AIDS virus; that would be roughly five times the *'B te among active-duty military per sonnel. Despite the differing infection rates for the two groups, the military data “can be used for monitoring levels and trends of . . . infection in the United States,” the Atlanta-based CDC said in its weekly report. For example, the agency noted, blacks in the military were 3.6 times as likely as whites to test positive for AIDS antibodies, and Hispanics were 2.5 times as likely. The Defense Department plans to to test all active-duty personnel for AIDS infections at least every year or two, the CDC said. “Therefore, the incidence of new . . . infection can be measured directly.” “This is the closest to a general E opulation in which it will be possi- le to actually measure the rate of new infections,” said Dr. Tim Don- dero, a CDC AIDS specialist. A September 1987 report showed seven new infections for every 10,000 Army personnel during a year, the CDC said. The Pentagon reported earlier this year that in testing nearly 4 mil lion people since October 1985 — both recruits and active-duty person nel — roughly 1.5 positive AIDS test results were found in every 1,000 people tested. That figure includes recruits who tested positive and then were not enlisted. College Station, Texas Friday, August 5, 1988 Winners all Mark Watson, with raised arms, celebrates a victory in the State Aquatic Special Olympics at Kyle Field Thursday. Also placing were Photo by Sam B. Myers (left to right) Larry Smith, Larry Dickerson and Elton Simmons. The Olympic events will continue through Saturday at Downs Natatorium. valve delays shuttle tests Delay disappoints personne SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — Employees at the Johnson Space Center expressed disappointment Thursday after NASA aborted the test firing of the Space Shuttle Discovery’s engines at Cape Canaveral, Fla. But the employees, who have seen five such post ponements in two weeks, $aid they would rather see the extra precautions than face another explosion like the one that destroyed the Challenger more than 2 years ago. The test is considered crucial for qualifying Discov ery for the first shuttle flight since the Challenger disas ter. “Although we were disappointed today’s test did not go full term, we were impressed with the professional manner in which the launch team responded to the sit uation,” said Navy Capt. Rick Hauck, one of five astro nauts slated to fly Discovery on the first post-Chal- lenger mission who was watching the test firing. “We are looking forward to learning the plan for re solving the problem, recognizing that such delays can occur. We maintain high confidence we’ll get a good mission off in the near future,” he said. Engineers hoped to ready the shuttle for another at tempt on Sunday, but one official said the delay could be as much as a week. The delay threatened to further push back Discovery’s launch, planned for late Septem ber. Hugh Harris, launch control center commentator, said the shuttle’s master computer “did not see that the engine bleed valve had fully closed” and automatically sent a shutdown signal. Engineers were trying to determine if there was a faulty valve or if the sensor had given an incorrect read- ing, he said. The bleed valve vents excess gases. open, Joseph Lombardo, the main engine program ager saidif the engines had fired with the valve excess pressure might have built up in the fuel line and caused a rupture that could had led to an explosion. For 21 teachers attending a workshop at the Johnson Space Center, the test firing was to be the finale of their two-week program. “I was really disappointed, so I can understad how they feel,” said Sandra A. Dyson, a science teacher from Kennebec, S.D., who along with the other teachers at tending the NASA Education Workshop for Math and Science Teachers got up at 5 a.m. to witness the test. “It was going to be our finale and being on the inside it would have been thrilling,” she said about watching the testing from the media center at JSC. For the past two weeks, the teachers from six states, have been saturated with information about the space program and all were looking forward to applying their new knowledge to the test firing. “Gradually, in about a week we’ve been able to know what would be going on,” Dyson said. “We knew that something happened because we learned about five computers and how it takes so many to say ‘Now, shut down.’ We didn’t know all the particulars, only that it was shut down.” Roger Kassebaum, regional coordinator of the teach ers’ program, said the aborted firing was a letdown but said it was good so many precautions were being taken. “We can’t afford another accident,” Kassenbaum said. “NASA has to be very careful this time. They’re going to be watched like a hawk and that’s good so we can save lives and not have another Challenger disas ter.” Jury convicts Biaggi in Wedtech Scandal ISM ■ CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -f-A computer spotted a valve prob- rjlem and scrubbed NASA’s test firing :lkl Oi Sp ace shuttle Discovery’s engines in the final second Thursday, deal ing another setback to America’s 2- sai‘ year effort to return to space, f,” ■ Engineers said it will be three to Kven days before they can try the test again. The postponement was the fifth in two weeks and made it al- B»st certain that Discovery’s flight ■ill be delayed from late September into October. B “That’s why we have llight read iness firings, to work the bugs out of Bfiipment before we launch,” said James Fletcher, the administrator of Bie National Aeronautics and Space Administration. B No American has been launched into space since the shuttle Chal lenger exploded 73 seconds after ■toff Jan. 28, 1986, killing seven J crew members. | The problem Thursday either was a valve that didn’t close as fast as it was supposed to or a sensor that gave a wrong reading of the valve’s open-closed position. ■ “We don’t know whether it was a Raulty indication or really a malfunc tion in the valve,” said Joseph A. Lombardo, engine program director Igt NASA’s propulsion facility in Mis sissippi. H Engineers were looking at the possibility that the sensor might have peen affected by long exposure to the extreme cold of the liquid hydro gen fuel. The tanks were loaded for TO hours, four hours longer than normal, so that special tests could be run on the fuel system. B To remain liquid, hydrogen must be kept at 423 degrees below zero. | Boyce Mix, engine manager at NASA’s Mississippi engine test fa cility, said historically some sensors are more temperature-sensitive than others. H As the tanks were being drained, he said, the valve was tested and it worked sluggishly the first time but normally after it warmed up. The computer, which controls all operations in the final 31 seconds of a launch countdown, received an in dication that the valve still was par tially open, which would allow high- pressure gases to enter areas unable to accommodate them, possibly caus ing a rupture and explosion. The computer reacted as it was supposed to. “The actual start commands to the engine were never given,” Lom bardo said. If the sensor is at fault, Lombardo said, a change in computer com mands might be a way around the problem. John J. Talone, who manages scheduling for Discovery said swap ping out the sensor and the valve could take three days to a week. “We just don’t have all the an swers this early,” Lombardo said. The valve operated perfectly in earlier tests but “sluggishness is what we determined today,” he said. During the test, the shuttle is se cured to the pad by bolts three inches in diameter and three feet long. The two solid booster rockets that flank the orbiter and the huge fuel tank are not fired in the test. NEW YORK (AP) — Rep. Mario Biaggi, a one-time hero cop, and four other people were convicted Thursday of racketeering for turn ing the now-defunct defense con tractor Wedtech Corp. into an enter prise that paid out millions in bribes to public officials. “We’re obviously disappointed, and we’re going to appeal,” Biaggi, 70, said outside the courtroom. His attorney, James LaRossa, said Biaggi would make a full statement at a news conference Friday. The verdicts came in the fifth day of the jury’s deliberations. Biaggi, a city police officer from 1942 to 1965 and at one time the most decorated policeman in the country, was convicted of all but one of the 16 counts against him, includ ing conspiracy, extortion, tax eva sion and receiving bribes. He was ac quitted of one count of mail fraud. Also convicted of racketeering were former Bronx Borough Presi dent Stanley Simon, 58; Wedtech founder John Marietta, 58, of Scar- sdale; Peter Neglia, 40, of Armonk; and Biaggi’s former law partner, Bernard Ehrlich, 59, of Bedford. Biaggi’s eldest son, Richard, 39, of Fort Lee, N.J., was acquitted of rack eteering charges but convicted of bribe receiving, mail fraud and tax charges. Mario Biaggi faces up to 20 years in prison on the racketeering counts, which are the most serious charges. He previously was sentenced to 30 months in prison for his 1987 con viction in Brooklyn for obstructing justice and taking an illegal gratuity. Biaggi, sitting closest to the jurors, never looked at them during the ver dict. After his conviction on the first count, he spoke quietly to his attor ney. He then removed his glasses, rubbed his eyes and shook his head. Later, Biaggi went to the building nurses’s office and his private physi cian was called to examine him. He later left the building by a side en trance to avoid photographers. The staff of the House Ethics Committee recommended earlier this year that the New York Demo crat be expelled for the 1987 convic tion, but the committee put off ac tion until he could defend himself. House Ethics Committee spokes man John Davison said Thursday he could not comment on the new con viction or its possible impact on the committee’s schedule, although he noted that the committee was to meet Tuesday on pending business. Biaggi was convicted of extorting $50,000 in cash and stock once worth more than $3 million from Wedtech in exchange for his politi cal clout. He also was convicted of filing false financial disclosure statements and income tax returns to cover up his illegal profits. A seventh defendant, Ronald Betso, 40, of Brooklyn, a former city police officer, was acquitted on all counts. U.S. District Judge Constance Baker Motley scheduled sentencing for Nov. 18. All six of the convicted defendants remained free on bail. Prosecutors also sought forfeiture of ill-gotten gains by the defendants convicted of racketeering. After huddling with defense lawyers, they agreed that Biaggi and Ehrlich would have to pay $350,000 each; Si mon $25,000 and Marietta, who was convicted of numerous tax evasion and bribery charges, $11.7 million. Neglia did not have to forfeit any money. The trial, which began March 11, generated nearly 20,000 pages of transcript over four months of testi mony from over 130 witnesses and a week of closing arguments. Bush: Dukakis military, foreign policies lacking Associated Press George Bush and his GOP allies painted Democrat Michael Dukakis as weak on mili tary and foreign policy Thursday while Du kakis campaigned in the South, seeking votes where Ronald Reagan won in 1980 and 1984 and where Jesse Jackson did well in this year’s Democratic primaries. I Prominent Democrats and Dukakis’ doc tor, meantime, suggested that political mo tivations were behind a rumor that Dukakis had been treated for mental problems — a rumor both Dukakis and the doctor denied. 1 And the Bush campaign received its strongest “No, thank you” yet from a man frequently mentioned as a prospective run ning mate, California Gov. George Deuk- mejian. B Bush, in Corpus Christi, Texas, told a group of Hispanic veterans that Dukakis’ positions were “a rejection of America’s role as a world leader and a repudiation of the Truman doctrine and the vision of John Kennedy.” Dukakis’ opposition to new nuclear weapons such as the MX missile were part of a policy for “unilateral disarmament,” Bush told the G.I. Forum. President Reagan lent Bush a helping hand earlier this week by vetoing a defense bill passed by the Democratic-controlled Congress. Although the bill provided an agreed-upon $299.5 billion for the Penta gon, Reagan said it was too restrictive, espe cially on his “Star Wars” missile defense program. Republicans in the Senate Thursday were pushing for more money for arms to the Contras, at least in part to embarrass Dukakis. The Massachusetts governor’s running mate, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D- Texas, disagrees with Dukakis on that issue and usually supports Contra aid. Dukakis, in Philadelphia, Miss., repeated his theme of making the military spend its money more wisely. And he told reporters it was “nonsense” for Bush to suggest he fa vored disarmament. “The fact of the matter is we have a mas sive survivable nuclear deterrent right now, 12,000 strategic nuclear warheads,” he said. “What we don’t have is the kind of strong conventional defense capability we must have, and that is going to be my top priority as president.” Asked whether he still supports a nuclear freeze, Dukakis said, “Sure, and a compre hensive test ban treaty.” Dukakis spoke to a mostly white audience estimated at more than 6,000 at the Ne shoba County Fair, where eight years ago Reagan launched his campaign as the Re publican presidential nominee. Elsewhere, Democrats expressed anger about a rumor that Dukakis had problems with mental depression in the 1970s, first following the death of his brother and then with his 1978 primary defeat for re-election as governor. “I think there’s something significant about what the Republicans have done here, the fact that they would use Lyndon LaRouche to get this thing started, the fact that they would get negative, that they would get so irrelevant so early,” said New York Gov. Mario Cuomo. At the Democratic National Convention in Atlanta two weeks ago, supporters of La Rouche, a political extremist and fringe presidential candidate, distributed fliers suggesting Dukakis was unstable. Dukakis’ doctor for the past 17 years, Gerald R. Plotkin, said, “I would have to as sume that the rumors are political. I don’t know whether the term is dirty tricks, but I think certainly the allegations . . . have no basis in fact.” The issue became widely publicized Wednesday after Reagan called Dukakis “an invalid” during a news briefing. Reagan later said he was trying to make a joke but “it didn’t work.” Bush told reporters Thursday that he “would thoroughly disapprove of it” if any one from his campaign was involved in the rumor-making. His chief of staff, Craig Fuller, said that on Wednesday campaign manager Lee At water “admonished everybody to stay out of this story, stay out of the rumor business.” Fuller also confirmed that Treasury Sec retary James A. Baker III would leave his post and become campaign chief before the Aug. 15 start of the Republican convention in New Orleans.