City Linda intently bel ihe >llar and dollar sloi lersell to a $15 prime aesars Hotel Casino I) worth of souvenir is and jewelry. ead, Linda did not credit cards for fear in to get extra money ish machines in the home, Linda figured knit $280 lighter. do bad for all day, is I laughed with my I a good time." )le Elimination idents, faculty, Co-Rec B/C. ational Sports >S: Men’s and trophy. Men's am shirts with !: Top 2 places he champions txceptions will : Tournament SPONSORS: trs will receive ne receives a ;e of rain, the Tom Reberat nament at the sn Field. ENTRY if they meet the ‘eational Sports Iching machine, will be inspected. Texas A&M The Battalion Vol. 88 No. 130 USPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas WEATHER FORECAST for WEDNESDAY: Partly cloudy skies and mild to cool temperatures. HIGH:74 LOW:52 Tuesday, April 11,1989 Chemists release results of fusion experiment By Alan Sembera SENIOR STAFF WRITER Texas A&M researchers an nounced Monday morning they suc cessfully reproduced part of a con- iroversial University of Utah experiment that reportedly created excess energy from a relatively sim ple nuclear fusion process. The A&M scientists are the first to duplicate the Utah experiment, which could be a major break through in the effort to create a rela tively dean, cheap and inexhaustible energy source through nuclear fu sion. A&M chemists Dr. Charles Mar lin, Dr. Kenneth Marsh and Bruce Gammon reported energy gains of 60 to 80 percent when they electro lyzed a jar of “heavy water” with a palladium electrode. Marsh, who is director of A&M’s Thermodynamics Research Center, said they could not confirm that the energy gain came from nuclear fu sion. He said there is a small chance that the energy was created by a chemical reaction, and that the ex periment was too small for them to count extra neutrons, which are a byproduct of fusion. But researchers at Georgia T ech announced later Monday afternoon they also reproduced the Utah ex periment and found a large number of neutrons that were created dur ing the experiment. The results from A&M and Georgia Tech are important to the scientific community, which had looked at the Utah experiment with suspicion because it claimed to have achieved fusion without the intense pressure and heat required in pre vious fusion reactions. Also, attempts by seveial major laboratories to reproduce the Utah experiment had failed. Martin, who is a chemistry profes sor, said the reason A&M succeeded where others failed is because of the school’s expertise in calorimetry — the measurement of heat. Marsh and Gammon have exten sive backgrounds in calorimetry, We have run the experiment using four different amounts of electric current and have found that excess energy varies between 60 percent and 80 percent,” — Dr. Charles Martin, A&M electrochemist Martin said, and were able to obtain precise measurements of the heat created during the experiment. He said they finished the experi ment early Sunday morning in a small room in the basement of Zachry Engineering Center using simple equipment available in any college laboratory. They had been working on the ex periment since March 29, less than a week after the Utah researchers an nounced their discovery. The scientists measured the heat created by running a small current of electricity through a 100 milliliter solution of deuterium oxide, or heavy water, Martin said. The electrical current entered the solution through a palladium rod 1 mm in diameter and 50 millimeter long, which was surrounded by an other electrode consisting of a plati num mesh, he said. “We have run the experiment us ing four different amounts of elec tric current and have found that ex cess energy varies between 60 percent and 80 percent,” Martin said. In the University of Utah experi ment, B. Stanley Pons, chairman of the chemistry department, and his British colleague Martin Fleisch- mann recorded about 300 percent excess energy. The scientists in Utah say they think the energy was created when the deuterium atoms of heavy water molecules fused together, releasing E rotons and neutrons along with a irge amount of energy. Heavy water is just like normal water, except that (deuterium substi tutes for hydrogen. Hydrogen consists of a proton and an electron, but deuterium has a proton, electron and a neutron, making deuterium oxide heavier than normal water. Strong forces are required to fuse deuterium atoms together. Fusion occurs naturally inside the sun because of intense heat and pressure. But scientists have been unable to create enough pressure to make fu sion efficient enough for mass en- ergy production. Energy created by nuclear power plants comes from fission reactions, which splits atoms. Fission reactions create dangerous radioactive wastes, which can take centuries to deteriorate. But fusion reaction creates no sig nificant radioactive waste and is in exhaustible. The Utah researchers speculate that fusion occured at room temper ature in their experiment because of the strong electrical properties of the palladium electrode. Dr. Kenneth Hall, deputy director of the Texas Engineering Experi ment Station, said A&M has other groups of scientists doing fusion re- searcn. He said much more research must be done before fusion can be used to create energy on a large scale. “Once we understand what’s going on, then we do what engineers call a ‘scale-up,’ ” Hall said. “We have one watt. We need to go to hundreds and thousands of watts.” Photo by Dean Saito Texas A&M researchers (I to r) Dr. Ken mon show a cell used as part of an experi- Marsh, Dr. Charles Martin, and Bruce Gam- ment to test for fusion reactions. Utah researcher says he never doubted SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah researcher whose nuclear fusion claims sparked widespread skepticism said Monday he never doubted his findings, but none theless feels relieved his work apparently has been con firmed. “This is just incredible,” said an elated B. Stanley Pons, chairman of the University of Utah’s chemistry department. “That’s one of the nicest things that could happen.” Scientists at both Texas A&M and Georgia Tech an nounced Monday that they had duplicated Pons’ exper iments, achieving similar results. The announcements came nearly three weeks after a March 23 news conference at which Pons and British colleague Martin Fleischmann of the University of Southampton, said they had sustained a controlled fu sion reaction at room temperature using equipment found in any college laboratory. The two said the experiment produced four times the energy they put into it. Reaction from the interna tional scientific community wasn’t just guarded, but on the whole pessimistic. Pons said that may have changed Monday with Texas A&M and Georgia Tech scientists announcing they had duplicated the Utah experiment. But while Texas A&M said it had achieved similar re sults, it was Georgia Tech’s findings that thrilled Pons the most. See Fusion/Page 5 Senate core curriculum committee asks students, faculty for input today By Kelly S. Brown STAFF WRITER Students and administrators today will discuss and further define what courses will and will not count in the core curriculum at an open hearing in 301 Rudder Tower at 3 p.m. Dr. Manuel Davenport, co-chairman of the Core Curriculum Oversight Committee (CCOS) of the Faculty Senate, said he’s hoping students and faculty will attend the hearing so the com mittee can get a better understanding of how ev eryone perceives the new guidelines. Resolutions for tentative CCOS guidelines on cultural heritage and social science categories of the core curriculum are the following : • A given course can be included in no more than one category of the core curriculum. • The category cidtural heritage will be changed to humanities to more accurately rep resent the nature of the courses in this category. • No course will be included in the core cur riculum in the humanities or social sciences areas that is predominantly concerned with skills or vo cational training. • No student will be permitted to satisfy all core curriculum requirements in the categories of humanities and social sciences by courses hav ing the same prefix. The following are approved as tentative guidelines for use of CCOS: • In order for a course to be included in the core curriculum in the category of humanities, a course must address one of the following areas: history, philosophy, literature, the arts, culture or language. A course also must demonstrate one or more of the following objectives: seek to recover, trans mit, analyze and interpret artistic or creative ex pressions of human culture; develop an appre ciation for and an ability to analyze or interpret aesthetic structures. Additional guidelines for a course to be in cluded in the core curriculum state that it in crease self awareness, self analysis or the ability for ethical reasoning; promote an understanding of the historical context of science, the arts or cul ture; and promote a philosophical understand ing of the principles of science, the arts or cul ture. • In order for a course to be included in the core curriculum in the category of social sciences it must address the following subject areas: an thropology, economics, political science, archaeo- logy, geography, psychology or sociology. A course also must demonstrate one or more of the following objectives — a scientific or ana lytical study of social institutions and/or the be havior of individuals or groups in relation to these institutions; or give an historical devel opment and analysis of social institutions and their relation to individual or group behavior. Another hearing will be on April 18 from 2:30 -3:30 p.m. in room 701 Rudder to consider and discuss the proposed tentative guidelines. Davenport said the guidelines will be sent back to the CCOS to consider what transpires at the hearings. From there the guidelines will go to the Academic Affairs Committee in the Faculty Sen ate, and if passed, will be fowarded to President William Mobley for approval. Cavalryman injured in fall from horse A member of the Texas A&M Parsons Mounted Cavalry re mained in serious condition Mon day night after being injured in a Parents’ Weekend ceremony Sun day. Scott Armstrong, a senior ani mal science major and member of outfit L-2, was injured when he was thrown from his horse dur ing a final review ceremony for Parents’ Weekend, said Drew Gibson, a senior building con struction major and commanding officer of the cavalry. To close the ceremony, all members of the cavalry charge their horses from one end of Sim pson Drill Field to the other, Gib son said. He said it appeared Armstrong lost his balance soon after the charge began and never regained it. Armstrong went down head first, Gibson said. Gibson estimated Armstrong’s horse was going about 30 m.p.h. at the time of the fall. Scott Armstrong University paramedics re sponded to the scene and took Armstrong directly to Humana Hospital, Gibson said. Armstrong was transferred to St. Joseph Hospital Sunday night, he said. Gibson said Armstrong was semi-conscious Monday night and has feeling in his Fingers and toes. Armstrong was speaking Monday but “not making sense,” he said. Phil Gooch, in the white top, prepares to take feated White, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, a swing at Taylor White during Fight Night at to win the Greek heavyweight division. Sixty- the College Station Hilton Monday night. five boxers competed in the annual event. Pro- Gooch, a member of Sima Phi Epsilon de- ceeds go to the American Heart Association. North says Reagan concealed involvement in arms shipment Oliver North testified Monday that former President Reagan and his attorney general, Edwin Meese III, concealed U.S. involvement in a November 1985 shipment of Hawk missiles from Israel to Iran. In a meeting on Nov. 12, 1986, Reagan clearly “had made a decision not to disclose” the shipment. North said. The president told a news confer ence on Nov. 19 — a week after that meeting — that the government had not been involved with other nations in shipping weapons to Iran and thatthe United States had shipped none before he signed a January 1986 authorizing document. Imme diately afterward, the White House put out a statement in which Reagan said a third country had been in volved. North testified that he assumed Reagan had known of the diversion of Iran arms sale funds to the Con tras, a contention Reagan has den ied. North, seemingly struggling to keep his temper, defended his stew ardship of an Iran-Contra cash fund and insisted the money he paid for a used car came instead from a $15,000 family cache in a metal box bolted to a closet floor. At the start of cross examination at his trial, North said he kept track in a spiral-bound notebook of every penny he disbursed from the Iran- Contra fund which totaled between $240,000 and $300,000. “The ledger is still around?” asked prosecutor John Keker. “It was destroyed,” North said. “Do you know who destroyed it?” New York (AP) — Eastern Air lines’ striking unions reached five- year agreements with Peter V. Ue berroth on Monday, but the pacts apparently require changes in his deal with Texas Air Corp. that the parent company has not yet ac cepted, sources said. Texas Air said it was studying the changes and insisted that the deal to sell Eastern to Ueberroth had not been completed after four days of al most continuous bargaining. “There’s no agreement as far as we’re concerned,” said Bruce Zi- rinsky, an Eastern lawyer. ^k?, re was no meeting of the minds, said Harvey Miller, another “Yes,” he said. “I did.” North, who destroyed stacks of other documents in November 1986, said he smuggled several papers out of the White House complex so “that I would have something to show if necessary, to show I had authority from my superiors for activities that I was engaged in.” Eastern lawyer. Ueberroth’s group and the three striking unions, representing the, pi lots and flight attendants, struck their own deals at about 6 a.m. Mon day in Washington. The parties then flew to New York and went directly to U.S. Bank ruptcy Court for a series of meetings with Judge Burton Lifland that lasted eight hours. Present for some of the meetings was former Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci, although his role was not identified. At 7 p.m., Ueberroth emerged from the courthouse and announced the union settlement, calling it “a historic labor partnership.” Ueberroth makes pact with Eastern’s unions