Poe 4J-Tue'sday, July 28, 1981-The Michigan Daily Senate inquiry into Casey controversy to' be 'thorough but quick' WASHINGTON (AP)-A veteran Watergate investigator yesterday promised a "thorough but quickr Senate inquiry into William Casey, as new controversy erupted over the CIA director's reported covert plan to top- ple Libyan strongman Moammar Khadafy., The investigator, Nashville attorney Fred Thompson, began work yesterday morning as special counsel in charge ofg the Senate Intelligence Committee's investigation of Casey's tangled past" business dealings and management of' the agency. "I EXPECT it to be a thorough inquiry but I hope it will be resolved in the near future," Thompson said. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said -that President Reagan hoped the questions about Casey would be resolved shortly-"in spite of Mr. Thompson's being retained there." "The president still has full confiden- ce in Mr. Casey and hopes this matter will be concluded shortly," Speakes Casey said. ALSO YESTERDAY, Senate In- ... submits evidence to committee telligence Committee staff began H reviewing 20-inch-high stacks of written House committee concern about the material that Casey sent each commit- planned action prompted some mem- tee member Sunday. Casey has said the hers to protest Casey's proposal in an documents would lay to rest any doubts unusual letter to Reagan, the source about his fitness to run the CIA. said. A Republican source confirmed that NEWSWEEK magazine reported the Casey recently presented the House In- covert operation was to include a telligence Committee with a plan for a "disinformation" campaign to em- CIA covert action to undermine barrass Khadafy, creation of a counter Khadafy, whom President Reagan has government to challenge his leadership accused of fomenting international and a paramilitary campaign. terrorism. The magazine said the CIA's goal was Khadafy's "ultimate" removal and that House committee members read WELCOME TO this as code for assassinating him. The magazine said the committee members DASCOLA STYLISTS mistrusted Casey's denial of any intent 0 4 Barbers to kill Khadafy. " No Waiting One Republican source said there was no indication Reagan decided to Liberty off State.. 668-9529 call off or alter the covert action East U. at So. U.....662-0354 because of the committee's criticism. Arboriand.......971-9975 THE SOURCE added that the letter Maple Vll-ge. 761-2733 to Reagan did not mention details of the action or the nation involved. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Army may cut some weapons programs to save money WASHINGTON-Concerned about rising costs, senior Army officials are taking a hard new look at possible slashes in some key weapons programs, including the M-1 tank. Despite the Reagan administration's readiness to boost defense spending, these senior officials doubt an expanding Army can afford all the gear it needs if it devotes much of its resources to buying very sophisticated, costly equipment. "The question is whether the additional expense (for such equipment) is worth the additional capability," said Gen. Edward Meyer, Army chief of staff. He spoke specifically of the two most expensive new Army weapons-the $2.5 million M-1 tank and the $1.2 million infantry fighting vehicle. Earlier this year, the armored infantry fighting vehicle, from which troops could shoot while moving across the battlefield, and the M-1 Abrams tank were described by the Pentagon as "the leading edge of the Army's program for modernizing its combat vehicle fleet." Heart transplant patient may escape brain damage. HOUSTON-A retired bus driver who has lived on three different hear- ts-including one man-made organ-in five days may have escaped brain damage during the transplant, hospital officials said yesterday. Although 36-year-old W.A. Meuffels of The Netherlands is responding to some commands, doctors said he was still in critical condition yesterday, one day after the artificial heart was replaced by a heart from a human donor. His new heart was beating strongly, officials said. After the artificial heart was implanted Thursday, doctors worried about the possibility of brain damage, since the heart failure which forced the transplant of the plastic organ had interrupted the normal blood flow to his brain. Burning chemicals controlled NEWARK, N.J.-Thousands of people were evacuated from businesses, an airport terminal and a motel yesterday as a chemical pouring from a punctured railroad car burned with flames 50 feet high and threatened an explosion. Nearby highways were closed for several hours, and the world's largest container port was shut down until the threat of toxic fumes and an explosion lessened. Flights continued at nearby Newark International-Airport, but controllers diverted planes around the fire, which was burning in an industrial area near the airport. Officials who evacuated a mile-wide area around the fire cautioned that there was still some danger. Doctors perform successful surgery on unborn child SAN FRANCISCO-Doctors here have performed the first successful surgery on an unborn child, a medical milestone one member of the surgical team called a "small step on the way to bigger things." "For the first time, we can look at a disorder in a fetus the same way we look at disorders in babies. Fetuses are becoming patients," pediatric surgeon Michael Harrison said at a news conference yesterday, describing the operation performed on Michael Skinner two weeks before his birth. "This is clearly the first successful surgical intervention in utero," he said. The operation on Michael, now 2% months old, was complicated by the risk to his twin sister, Mary, who was developing normally beside him. Mexican officials turning back California produce SAN FRANCISCO-Mexican officials said yesterday they have started turning back produce-laden trucks from California, calling the move a necessary step in preventing the spread of a destructive fruit fly. The extent of the ban was not clear. A statement from Jorge Gutierrez Samperio, director of vegetable sanitation for the Agriculture Ministry, said Mexico had banned the importation of produce from Santa Clara, San Mateo, Alameda and Los Angeles counties. However, the statement went on to say the step is "only a precautionary measure to guarantee that fruits and vegetables produced in California do not come into Mexico for the time being," leaving it uncertain whether produce from other areas was being turned back as well. Los Angeles Coun- ty has not been infested with the Mediterranean fruit fly. LONG NECK BEERS 2 for 1 THE FALCONS