'W'liT’ii?"D' .1 i .l* ., .-. Ttie Battalion Vol. 88 No. 12 GSPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, September 13, 1988 Houston Astros pitcher Charlie Kerfeld signs an tion science major, Monday. Kerfeld was promot- autograph for Robert Moore, a senior construe- ing the grand opening of Wings’n’Things. Ex-foreman claims payoffs kept plant defects hidden FORT WORTH (AP) — An ex- foreman for Brown 8c Root Inc., ivho complained of safety def ects at he troubled Comanche Peak nu- :lear power plant, claimed Monday ae was later paid for his silence by he project’s manager and a subcon- :ractor. Joseph Macktal, former electrical foreman, and his attorneys have filed a motion with the U.S. labor secretary to strike restrictive por- ions of a settlement agreement, vhich Macktal alleges paid thou sands of dollars to him. “I own property within 30 miles of he plant, Macktal said. “I own acre- tge there and that was my motiva- :ion in bringing my allegations for ward. I told people, ‘Hey, guys, ve’re not doing these things right.’ Phey wouldn’t listen.” Macktal and one of his attorneys, itephen Kohn of Fort Worth, re eased copies of the agreement and in affadavit at a news conference on he steps of the Tarrant County Jourthouse. “The settlement agreement is troof positive that whistle blowers ire given money to withhold from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission unresolved safety concerns,” Kohn said, and called the new claims “Co- manchegate.” “This is the very surface indica tion of a massive cover-up of health and safety concerns at Comanche Peak,” he said, adding he hopes other whistle blowers now can come forward with new information. “Us ing money to buy silence is the most dangerous mechanism of all.” Macktal claims he was forced by his former attorneys to sign the re strictive agreement with Texas Utili ties and Brown Sc Root, the subcon tractor at the plant, in settlement of a labor case. “The agreement required that he agreed never to voluntarily testify in any court or administrative proceed ing concerning Comanche Peak,” David Colapinto, a Washington la bor lawyer for Macktal, said. “In effect, it was a gag order on his testimony of safety concerns about the nuclear power plant,” he said. Macktal claimed that, in the agreement signed in January 1987, his attorneys were paid $35,000 by TU and Brown 8c Root. Of that, he received $15,000. Macktal said he was discharged from the subcontrac tor in January 1986 after raising safety concerns about the plant. Meanwhile, the Fort Worth-based Citizens for Fair Utility Rates Filed a request Monday with the NRC to re institute licensing proceedings in the Comanche Peak case. “That is what is so criminal about that (the agreement); I wanted to go to the NRC and I couldn’t,” Macktal said. Hearings scheduled before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, an arm of the NRC, on the plant were dismissed in July after Citizens Association for Sound Energy reached a $10 million agreement with TU officials. Claims have repeatedly surfaced on safety and construction defects at the project, which is more than nine years behind schedule and, at $9.1 billion, about 10 times the original price projection. Macktal said unresolved safety al legations about the project have never been addressed by the NRC because of the settlement’s restric tive terms. Heat, drought raise food prices WASHINGTON (AP) — Drought and hot weather libbled at the nation’s corn and soybean crops last nonth, but new Agriculture Department estimates bowed Monday that most of the damage had already >een done in J une and J uly. Officials held to an earlier prediction that consumer bod prices will go up an average of only 3 percent to 5 lercent this year, with about 1 percent of the rise aused bv drought. A further increase is expected in 989. The department estimated the corn harvest, which is tnder way, at a five-year low of 4.46 billion bushels, lown 37 percent from 7.06 billion bushels harvested in 987. The new crop projections, based on Sept. 1 surveys, vere down by less than 1 percent from the forecast a nonth ago. In May and June, before the drought tightened its ;rip, USD A projected the corn harvest at 7.3 billion mshels, based on trends and an assumption of normal veather. Those projections were revised downward in July to 5.2 billion bushels, assuming tarmers got normal weather the remainder of the season. In August, the forecast was lowered to 4.48 billion bushels, the smallest harvest since 1983, when drought and federal acreage curbs reduced output to 4.17 billion bushels. The soybean harvest was estimated at a 12-year low of 1.47 billion bushels, down 23 percent from 1.9 billion bushels produced last year but virtually unchanged from the August forecast. Estimates last spring called for about 1.88 billion bushels, and the July projection was 1.65 billion bushels. Production of all wheat was projected at 1.81 billion bushels, down 14 percent from 2.1 billion produced in 1987 and 1 percent below the August forecast. In May and June, USDA forecast this year’s wheat output would be up slightly. The July projection was 1.84 billion bushels, and the August forecast was 1.82 billion bushels. Overall, the department’s Agricultural Statistics Board said U.S. crop production this year is expected to drop to 88 percent of a 1977 base used as a comparison. That would be the lowest since 1983. Mobley: Constituents should provide advice President outlines goals at meeting “There is no question in my mind that the Faculty Sen ate has a legitimate and important role to play in our University. I look forward to receiving your advice on issues of importance to you. ” — President William Mobley By Laura White Staff Writer The Faculty Senate, students, staff and administrators will be looked to for advice on issues facing A&M, President William H. Mobley said Monday afternoon. Mobley shared his views on lead ership and outlined his primary goals in a guest presentation to the Faculty Senate in Rudder Tower. “There is no question in my mind that the Faculty Senate has a legiti mate and important role to play in our University,” he said. “I look for ward to receiving your advice on is sues of importance to you.” Mobley said he plans to get the constituent groups involved in the decision-making process. “I am a strong believer in partici pative management,” he said. “I ex pect and value broad-based partici pation in the governance process from all constituent groups, includ ing the Faculty Senate.” Mobley also stressed the impor tance of establishing short- and long term goals to measure the effective ness of any new programs. A major goal for the administra tion in the coming years will be to obtain more money from sources other than the state, Mobley said, and a major capital campaign will be recommended to the board in the coming months. “A priority goal . . . will be to acce lerate the development of the exter nal resources needed to supplement the increasingly tight state re sources,” he said. Mobley referred again to increas ingly tight state resources when asked about the future of the Ster ling C. Evans Library. The library, which ranks 48th in the nation in terms of quality, is in need of more holdings and space, he said. “The library will be put high on the list of things donors could sup port,” Mobley said. “Since this is a state-wide problem, it would help if the state would help out. “It seems to be a zero-sum game,” he said. “Out of marginal resources, a greater percentage will go to the li brary, at the expense of something else.” Mobley said he looks forward to working with the Faculty Senate in the future. “Working together, I believe we can take full advantage of the oppor tunities ahead for this institution and the state and nation it serves,” he said. In other business, the Faculty Sen ate discussed the lack of faculty in put in the recent NCAA decision. The Committee of the Whole made and approved a motion that the Executive Committee negotiate a primary role for the Faculty Senate in the Athletic Council’s oversight of the University’s athletic program. The motion is an attempt to im prove communication between the Athletic Council and the Faculty Senate. It will be forwarded to Mob ley who will consider forwarding it to the System policy makers. The Senate also added six new history courses, eight theater arts courses, two sociology courses, 12 women’s studies courses, an anthro pology course and an graduate-level mechanical engineering course to the University curriculum. In addition, the Senate made mi nor changes in 13 existing courses. In further action, the Senate ap proved the Graduate Council’s sug gestion that Medical College Admis sions Test scores be accepted in place of Graduate Record Exams for students applying for the combined medical-doctorate program. Ershad asks for more aid to compensate for flood DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP)—The president of Bangladesh appealed Monday for more foreign aid to feed more than 40 million people left homeless by the flood, and doctors tried to halt an epidemic of diarrhea. More than 250,000 people were suffering from diarrhea, the healtli center said, with nearly 36,000 new cases reported in the last 24 hours. Many got the disease by drinking water contaminated by raw sewage and flood waters. A senior doctor who declined to be identified said about 5 percent of the diarrhea patients have con tracted cholera. President Hussain Muhammad Ershad said the $280 million in aid so far promised to his country was not enough even to rebuild roads washed away by flood waters that cover three-fourths of the country. He said it was too early to estimate the total amount of funds needed. “For centuries the people of Ban gladesh have lived with floods, but never before have the rivers un leashed such fury on her people,” the 59-year-old former army general told a news conference. The government puts the official death toll at 881 from the floods, which started June 13 and reached new heights in late August. 1 he health control center said 138 deaths were from diarrhea, while the others were caused by drown- ings, houses collapsing and snake bites. Daily tallies in Dhaka newspapers, however, put the death toll at 1,647, without giving a breakdown by cat egory. A substantial amount of emer gency flood relief arrived Monday in a giant U.S. military cargo plane. The C-5a Galaxy contained water purification units, water storage tanks and 10,000 five-gallon water containers. The plane also brought the dep uty U.S. aid director, Jay F. Morris, and doctors from the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, water purification specialists, and Defense Department transport and logistics specialists. The International Center for Di arrheal Disease Research, funded primarily by foreign aid, said it had admitted 550 patients with diarrhea in the past 24 hours, compared with an average of 155 patients a day last month. The senior doctor who reported the cholera problem said it was typ ical that 5 percent of the diarrhea cases would turn out to be cholera. Local brief The Bangladesh Student Asso ciation will continue raising funds to aid victims of floods that have left more than 21 million people homeless in that country. The group will sell bangles and crafts and take donations in the MSC through Friday. The group has raised about $610 already for relief of flood victims. Dhaka newspapers also have re ported isolated cholera cases from people drinking flood-polluted wa ter. Ershad said there are only 8,()()() doctors in Bangladesh, a nation of 1 10 million people. He said 30 mil lion to 40 million people were ma rooned by the flood or in need of help. He also said the flood had de stroyed or damaged 8 million houses. Since the average size of a family in Banglasesh is six people, that would appear to mean that 48 million are homeless, up from the 25 million reported previously. Dukakis claims Bush ruined battle with drugs, terrorism Associated Press Democrat Michael Dukakis charged Monday that an unsteady George Bush botched his assign ments in the battle against drugs and terrorism, while the Republican nominee challenged Dukakis to state his views on the U.S. strike against Libya and invasion of Grenada. Bush also named a panel of na tional security advisers including former Secretaries of State Henry A. Kissinger and Alexander M. Haig as well as Zbigniew Brzezinski, who was Democrat Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser. Dukakis, launching a three-day counter-offensive against Republi can charges he would cripple Ameri can defense and foreign policy, told 200 supporters at a union hall in Philadelphia that Bush was disas trously and completely and unforgi vably wrong for not warning Presi dent Reagan against selling arms to Iran in an attempt to free hostages. Dukakis said he would restore re spect for America, which he said had been undermined by Reagan-Bush failures to combat terrorism, come to grips with the trade deficit and stop the avalanche of drugs . . . pouring across our borders. “In each of these areas, George Bush has failed,” Dukakis said. “I want to beat our foreign com petitors; he’s willing to settle for sec ond best. I want to crack down on terrorism; he knuckled under to the ayatollah. I want a real war on drugs; his answer to drug kingpins like (Panama leader Manuel) No riega is J. Danforth Quayle.” Bush, at a news conference in Washington and later at a rally be fore 1,000 flag-waving Cuban- Americans in Union City, N.J., cud geled Dukakis on defense and for eign affairs as well as the economy. “I will really admit that I am hav ing trouble pinning down the liberal governor of Massachusetts on his de fense,” Bush said in New Jersey. Bush demanded that Dukakis spell out whether he supported the 1983 U.S. bombing raid on Libya and the invasion “to free Grenada from its Cuban masters.” “I support those things; now, does he support them? Let’s ask him that question,” Bush said. If the answer is no, he said, Dukakis would show himself to have veered outside the bipartisan mainstream on national security issues. He also asked whether Dukakis would admit that your support for a nuclear freeze was a mistake. Dukakis had his owm questions for Bush, ranging from the Iran-Contra affair to why the Reagan administra tion cut funds for the Coast Guard and aid for state and local drug agencies while it put General No riega on its payroll. Noriega is under indictment on drug trafficking charges. “What kind of judgment is this?” Dukakis asked. “What kind of priori ties are these? . . . We need better leadership from the next president.” Earlier, introducing Brzezinski as one of his advisers, Bush said his ob jective was to shape a foreign policy built on the principles of bipartisanship . . . realism, strength, dialogue and engagement. “The U.S. must live up to its re sponsibilities in the world,” Bush said.