Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 8, 1987 Feds question engineer in train collision CHASE, Md (AP) - Federal investigators said yesterday that they wanted to know why tape was placed over a warning whistle in the cab of a Conrail locomotive that otherwise might have helped prevent a fatal crash with an Amtrak train. Representatives of the National Transportation Safety Board were expected to question Conrail engineer R. L. Gates and another crew member in Baltimore about Sunday's crash, which killed 15 people and injured more than 170. Gates's attorney, Stephen Tully, said that the Conrail engineer was questioned under oath for more than two hours, answering questions about the warning whistle and whether advance signal lights told him to slow down. An NTSB committee said the warning whistle in the lead Conrail engine cab was taped, but Gates denied that the whistle was taped over, Tully said. Train crew members sometime silence or muffle the whistle, which essentially duplicates the function of cab signal lights, to avoid the annoyance, according to some engineers. According to Tully, Gates also testified that the first overhead signal about two miles from the crash site told him to proceed at normal speed and it was not until he reached the second signal-about 500 feet from the accident site that he was told to stop. Cut may threaten aid Band leader mourned Associated Press Two unidentified former members of the Zanesville High School band comfort each other during the funeral Tuesday of band director Larry Wilson. Wilson died in the New Year's Eve fire that heavily damaged a San Juan, Puerto Rico, hotel. (Continued from Page 1) recommendations from the Reagan administration to abolish the SEOG. Richard Kennedy, University vice president for government relations, said the new proposals for cuts in financial aid are similar to those in past budgets, but that the chances for the cuts being approved are "remote." If the cuts are approved, however, the University would suffer a "dramatic drop in enrollment," Kennedy said. S Au INTERESTED IN AN ACTUARIAL CAREER ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THE CNA INSURANCE COMPANIES' ON-CAMPUS RECEPTION. MONL. Y, JANUARY 12th 4:30 til6:00 PM MICHIGAN UNION IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS White House nixes tax hike WASHINGTON - President Reagan's budget director poured cold water yesterday oni a proposed temporary tax surcharge, saying the White House would not participate in any deficit-reduction meeting unless tax increases were ruled out beforehand. "It's very clear that if you put taxes on the table (for discussion), then there will notbe a summit," James Miller, director of the Office of Management and Budget, told reporters after outlining Reagan's proposed 1988 spending plan to the Senate Budget Committee. Answering questions from the committee, Miller showed no enthusiasm for a suggestion by Chairman Lawton Chiles (D-Fla.), for some kind of temporary tax increase that would die as soon as thi deficit were wiped out. Bomb injures 40 in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon-Assassins wounded former President Camille Chamoun and 35 other people and killed three bodyguards and a pas - serby with a remote-controlled car bomb as his motorcade drove through Beirut yesterday. Chamoun, a Christian who was the architect of the first U.S. military peacekeeping mission in the Middle East and now serves as Lebanon's finance minister, suffered minor shrapnel wounds in the face and both hands, police said. The 9:30 a.m. blast tore out a hole six feet deep and 14 feet wide and hurled Chamoun's gray, bullet-proof Mercedes Benz about 60 feet off the road in the Mattahen industrial district of Christian east Beirut. "But it (Chamoun's car) miraculously landed on its wheels and he survived along with his driver," a police spokesman said. It was the fifth time in 19 years that assassins tried in vain to kill Chamoun. AIDS antibodies linked to risk of disease, study says BOSTON-Measuring levels of AIDS antibodies and four other factors can help doctors predict which people infected with the AIDS virus face a high risk of coming down with the disease within a few months, a study shows. The research shows that those with low levels of antibodies to the virus in their blood are five times as likely as those with high levels to get the disease within 15 months. This suggests, though it doesn' prove, that AIDS antibodies may shield people from the disease. "I suspect that the antibody response early in the course of infectior probably is protective," said the study's director, Dr. Frank Polk o Johns Hopkins. If so, this may help explain one of the central mysteries of the AIDS epidemic - why some infected people fall ill while others remai healthy for many years. More than 29,000 Americans have gotten AIDS, but experts believ that several times that number are infected with the AIDS virus and n one knows their ultimate fate. U.S. discusses peace overture WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration, weighing a fresh diplomatic approach to the war in Nicaragua, sent its two top Latin American specialists to Miami yesterday for secret talks on a new peace initiative backed by Costa Rica and Guatemala. But a U.S. official, who confirmed the, mission undertaken by Assistant Secretary of State Elliot Abrams and Philip Habib, the president's special envoy, was skeptical that the leftist Sandanista government in Managua was prepared to accept any formula designed to promote democracy in Nicaragua. "The Sandanistas have been resistant to democracy," the official said. "The Sandanistas will have to be pressured if there is to be a solution." Broomfield opposes special panel for Iran-Contra affair WASHINGTON - Rep. William Broomfield (R-Mich.), was one of just two congressmen voting yesterday against a resolution establishing a special House committee to investigate the secret Iran-Contra weapons deal. Broomfield, who has been selected to serve on the special Watergate- style committee, said the resolution gives the 15-member panel too much time to complete its work, includes inadequate safeguards for national security secrets and sets "an outlandishly broad scope" for the investigation. "The nation cannot afford another.. . committee exercise in which leaks damaging to our nation's diplomatic and intelligence efforts appear daily in the press," Broomfield said, referring to a mid-1970s congressional probe into intelligence agencies. Broomfield, a 16-term legislator from Birmingham who is ranking Republican on the house Foreign Affairs Committee and the senioi GOP member of the House, said he opposed the resolution with regret, since he favors establishing a special committee to investigate the arms deal. Vol. XCVI -- No.70 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. 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