World/Nation the Battalion Friday, Nov. 11, 1988 Page texas- Pentagon admits to using Stealth jet fighte WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Air Force has been flying a “Stealth” ra dar-evading jet fighter for seven years, and now has about 50 of the planes at an isolated base in Nevada, the Pentagon acknowledged Thursday. Partially lifting a veil of secrecy that has enveloped the plane from its birth, the Pentagon and Air Force released a photograph of the unusual aircraft but declined to discuss its capabilities. The limited disclosures were made now be cause the Air Force needs to start flying the craft in daylight, a spokesman said. The Pentagon said the plane had been declared operational and ready for war time missions in October 1983, but that it first flew in June 1981. The Stealth fighter is officially known as the F-l 17A, Dan Howard, the Penta gon’s chief spokesman, said. somewhat resembles a sting ray — black or dark blue with no exterior markings. The cockpit is located far forward in a nose that comes to a sharp point, with what appears to be gun barrels or air speed probes sticking out. The plane features a “V” tail atop a fuselage that ends in a rectangle, appar ently completely encompassing the two engines that power the plane. The air in takes for the engines appear to be fitted tightly into the sides of the fuselage, just below the cockpit. The swept-back wings would suggest the plane is capable of flying at superso nic speeds, but the Air Force declined to discuss the matter. Military sources have said the plane is designed for sneak ground attacks and not air-to-air dog- fighting. The Air Force has ordered 59 of the planes and 52 of them have been deliv ered, Howard said. Three of the planes have crashed and two pilots have been killed, the Air Force added. To protect its secrecy, the plane has been flown only at night. But the Air Force needs to start flying the plane dur ing daylight if it is to integrate the squad ron’s war plans with other units, Howard said. Howard and Air Force officials de clined to discuss how much the program cost. Nor would they offer information on the plane’s dimensions or general ca pabilities, the materials from which it was constructed, or the major subcon tractors involved. without being detected on rad! ating confusion with unexpm ing runs. The plane is built by the Lockheed Corp. at a tightly guarded plant in Bur bank, Calif., the Air Force said. According to military sources, the planes are kept at a high state of read iness for use as “aerial shock troops,” capable of slipping behind enemy lines The sources said the decision the plane was prompted in p® scheduled Nov. 22 unveilinptf Stealth bomber. The bomber! built with more recent and technology than the fighter, soi little reason to continue tt fighter, the sources explained. Official calls early Hitler years ‘glorious “It has been operational since October 1983 and is assigned to the 4450th Tacti cal Group at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev. The aircraft is based at the Tonopah Test Range Airfield in Nevada. ” The photograph released by the Penta gon depicts a relatively small, swept- wing plane with a flat underbelly. It BONN, West Germany (AP) — The president of parliament called the early years of the Hitler era a “glorious” time for many Germans, triggering a walkout during the government’s solemn cere mony Thursday marking the Kristallnacht. The remarks by Philipp Jenninger led to de mands for his resignation by members of the oppo sition Greens and Social Democrats, who were among about 50 who marched out of the hall dur ing the nationally televised speech to parliament. Jenninger’s address threatened to overshadow West Germany’s carefully planned ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the Kristallnacht, the night the Nazis began their first organized push against the Jews. Among the guests at the government’s ceremony Thursday was West German Jewish Community leader Heinz Galinski. Social Democrat chairman Hans-Jochen Vogel later wrote to Jenninger and said the parliament president had shown a disturbing lack of judgment in his speech. Vogel said he and other Social Dem ocrats were filled with shame and sorrow over what Jenninger had done. The 56-year-old conservative talked at length about the positive feelings of many ordinary Ger mans early on in the Hitler dictatorship, but with out giving counterbalancing comments. “Didn’t Hitler bring to reality what (Kaiser) Wilhelm II had only promised, that is to lead the Germans to glorious times?” Jenninger said. “Wasn’t he chosen by Providence, a Fuehrer such as is given to a people only once in a thousand years? “For the fate of the Germans and European Jews, Hitler’s successes were perhapsn;; fateful than his crimes and misdeeds,"] said. “ The years from 1933 to 1938,eve distant retrospective and in the knowledpj followed, still are a fascinating thingli throughout history there was hardlyap Hitler’s triumphal procession during i years.” Jenninger then cited such events as kj the Saarland, Austria and part of CzccIb into the Third Reich, as well as the I Olympics in Berlin. Physicists hope super collider will help explain matter origin Reagan initiates amiable transitioi & Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — Physicists hope the superconducting super collider will help them explain the very origin of matter itself and perhaps lead them to their holy grail: a single theory that unites all the forces of nature, from grav ity spanning galaxies to the mysterious bonds that hold the proton together. The first task of the collider, if it is built, may be a search for the Higgs par ticle, named after Peter Higgs of the Uni versity of Edinburgh in Scotland, the sci entist who first postulated its existence. Scientists say this subnuclear particle should emerge from proton-proton colli sions 20 times more powerful than any thing possible today. Finding it would be a giant step forward in understanding na ture. The super collider, a 53-miles around machine, will be the first atom smasher able to concentrate in a small volume of space the energy density that must have existed in the theoretical big bang theory origin of the universe. The Energy De partment on Thursday selected a site near Dallas for the giant machine, even though Congress has not yet decided to build it. The current picture of nature, called the standard model, is tantalizingly in correct — but nobody is sure just where it goes wrong. At very high energies, the theory predicts certain particle interac tions will occur with greater than 100 percent probability — which is an im possibility. Modifications to fix up the standard model almost always requires extremely energetic collisions for their experimen tal tests. A recent example of theory-testing on which the collider will build is the dis covery of the so-called W and Z particles at the CERN particle accelerator in Ge neva, Switzerland, in 1983, predicted by the “electroweak” theory. This shows the fundamental identity of the familiar forces of electricity and magnetism and the weak forces responsible for some forms of nuclear radioactivity, including the reactions respnsible for the sun’s en ergy. It is the W and Z particles that carry the unified “electroweak” force, just as it is the familiar photon or particle of light that carries the electromagnetic force. Though the masses of the W and Z particles could be estimated in advance as roughly 90 times that of the proton, there is no way to calculate the mass of the Higgs particle. But scientists say there should be an upper limit of about 1,000 times the mass of the proton. All mass is equivalent to energy, shown in the famous “E = MC squared” relationship first developed by Albert FFA changes title to exclude farmers Einsten. That is, the energy of any parti cle is equal to its mass times the speed of light squared. It’s convenient to speak of mass in terms of “electron volts,” the energy ac quired by an electron falling through a voltage. Electrons in the filament of a flashlight bulb are accelerated through three electron volts. The mass of a proton at rest is a little less than a billion electron volts. The total collision energy must be around 40 trillion electron volts to create a particle of 1 trillion electron volts. The world’s most powerful accelerator, at Fermi Lab in Chicago, can produce two trillion electron volts, whereas the super collider is designed to generate 40 tril lion electron volts. Other possible tasks for the super col lider: of power to Busli Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Future Farmers of America has voted to take “farmers” out of its name be cause the word was hurting recruit ing. Delegates at the 61st annual con vention of the Future Farmers of America voted with little debate Wednesday to rename the group the National FFA Organization. FFA is open to students interested in agriculture or related fields, such as agricultural economy, farm equip ment technology and agribusiness. FFA officers and U.S. Education Department advisers to the organiza tion had recommended the name change to help stop a 23 percent de cline in membership since the mid- 1970s. The FFA has some 416,000 active members nationwide. Local chapters will be permitted to use the old name if they prefer. The organization’s 113-member legislative body also voted to strip the words “vocational agriculture” from the FFA symbol, constitution and by laws and replace them with the words “agricultural education. ” Backers said the new terminology is more comprehensive and reflects changes in agriculture. The delegates also voted to offer FFA membership, now confined to high school and college students, to seventh and eighth graders. • Electrons, muons, taus and neutri nos all appear to be simple geometric points instead of collections of smaller particles. The super collider may be able to see if this is true. • If there is a Higgs particle, is it made of smaller particles? Some theories give it structure and postulate the exis tence of forces inside it analagous to those inside the proton. • Another theory called “supersym metry” predicts several Higgs particles and accounts for all forces, including gravity, while giving a partner particle to every known particle. This theory says particles are made of “superstrings” of fantastically small dimensions instead of geometrical points. • In the standard model, a proton should decay spontaneously, once in a rare while. All attempts to spot such de cay have failed. WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan took the first steps toward an amiable transition of power to Presi dent-elect George Bush by leaving instructions for Cabinet officers and other political appointees to turn in their resignations by Inauguration Day,Jan. 20. The new president and the old met with White House chief of staff Ken neth Duberstein Thursday and later attended a Cabinet meeting as Bush began the work of assembling his ad ministration. The president-elect also met with Craig Fuller and Bob Teeter, leaders of his transition office, before flying off to a long weekend of fishing in Florida. Vice President-elect Dan Quayle also met with Bush’s transition team. The transition office officially opens for business on Monday, but the telltale signs already were in place in a rented suite of offices a few blocks from the White House. Secu rity guards erected metal detectors and a desk was set up at the entrance where a volunteer collected resumes from job-seekers. The vice president made his first Cabinet appointment on Wednesday, naming campaign chairman James A. Baker III secretary of state. Bush has told reporters he wants to name the balance of his Cabinet sooner rather than later, but he has set no timetable. Reagan and Bush were applauded as they walked together into a Cab inet meeting. White House spokes man Marlin Fitzwater quoted Reagan as saying, “We don’t even argue over which side of the table: on. But for all the friendliness.! Reagan reminded his men, “Wi still in charge until Jan. 20 an; still responsible for making dec; of the government.” Bush on Wednesday proi brand new team when he takes But Treasury Secretary Ni Brady, Attorney General Dick burgh and Education Secretary Cavazos all have been mentioiiiii! possible holdover appointments The outgoing Gov. John Sum New Hampshire, who is viedi likely to receive a major posu new administration, set his high. He told reporters in Hampshire that he would turni 1 offers to be secretary of educate: energy, but White House cliiti: staff “isn’t on my ‘no list.”’Sue| who campaigned energetically Bush and was instrumental intiis ical victory in the New Haraps* primary last February, said he to:! been offered any post. The rumor mill was working at speed on day two after the election The names spit out included ft Sen. John Tower of Texas; Rep. Jack Edwards of Alabam: former National Security Brent Scowcroft for the defeated Maryland Senate c; Alan Keyes, a former diplomaU possible ambassador to the Unit Nations and defeated Ohio Sell candidate George Voinovich, Cldj land’s mayor, for housing and development. Stand [Texas A&M team puts ft eg A&M Steakh ousel Delivers 846-5273 New breed of Eagle found in Texas. The last da ec. 7, and fin The registr xamination S' eludes a “read: Donald Car resident Will le a week ag degree candic ^expecting to g ■ommencemei Diplomas w ies to all stud list will be j ec. 16. “Every deg; lion ceremom Problem Pregnancy? ['•We (isten, We care, We Help •Free Pregnancy Tests •Concerned Counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy' Service We’re Local! 3620 E. 29th Street (next to MaSey's Gifts) 24 fir. hotCine 823-CARE TIME FOR A RESUME Kinko’s can help you prepare for your future. We have a wide range of papers and envelopes to give your resume the professional look it deserves. kinko's Great copies. 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