New techniques for minor surgery See page 3 Texas A&M The »xt 0i Vol 78 No. 84 CISPS 0453110 16 pages 'bt Soviet Union reacts to Reagan's speech Battalion Serving the Gniversity community College Station, Texas Friday, January 26, 1984 'thitiji job, i|'! 1 insbu irn lb,, se. (i.for, Jrwlij md k|] 'HI is, if it in it a rei t i say in ondtrij agio ihen n tedattt er a »1 Inessoi You* leday i an’isat undl ought Senators rote down Day raise K United Press International | WASHINGTON — The Senate, 3t w ithout a fight, voted Thursday to 11 an election-year pay raise of' 1,443 that all members of Congress :gan receiving Jan. 1. ■he legislation passed 66-19 in the mate, where nearly a third of the embers are facing re-election, and asient to the House. Prospects for tssage are also good in the House, ■he measure cleared the Senate ter multimillionaire Sen. Howard ■enbaum, D-Ohio, charged some the repeal supporters with a lack of Brage,” and said, “I don’t know if eir victory is not shallow.” Betzenbaum directed his attack on H. Don Nickles, R-Okla., and Jake chanct.’B 1 ’ R-Utah, calling “unadulterated -j ala;key” their claim that calling off ne p|jje pay raise would help balance the Jdgr: or My he 3.5 percent pay raise, which e l ‘' a ent into effect Jan. 1, raised the iesse ilanes of members of Congress from 9800 to $72,243. '’‘g - Members of Congress received t he iente 1 jy raise along with most federal gov- ig e 0 nment employes. The legislation l our j SS (. ( | Thursday would repeal the in- mucli -ease on iy f or senators and con- soft tessmen. Iso plasff '‘^"l^arly last year, the Senate raised )n 1 pay of its members f rom $62,600 “o )$() ( J,800 and imposed a cap of 30 can ercent of salary on honoraria, me amp IlingrBlickJes, Cam and Sen. David ■n, D-Okla., said they were spon- ■ ime “Btg the repeal as a signal to Amer- ut ans that all must sacrifice, as the gov- nnient seeks to cut deficits, and be- ’11 It: , n iuse the pay raise went into effect, ithout a vote, during the recess, i But Metzenbaum said the legisla- irs supporting the repeal were “kid- S ctl ing Americans,” and said it was “un- ■aterated malarkey, telling us we ' rk ‘ egoing to balance the budget.” ^ Noting the savings would be $ l .39 azor illion a year, Metzenbaum sug- :sted that the sponsors fight as hard -, r ’ ^closing lax loopholes, cutting the :fense budget and putting a ban on pkj'j' moraria. 16 JF ha t ta ^ es courage,” he said. “It ^ lk aesn’t take courage to make col- 0, | 11 agues stand up for a 3.5 percent ' ! ictease. ougn< 9 time. ^Senator, you’re going to win but I ; losinfln't know if the victory is not shal- rce b jw," he said. r a H^Betis. John Chaffee, R-R.I., and /erV: Ian Simpson, R-Wyo., accused Met- 2,incln|nbaum of launching a personal owh jtack on colleagues — forbidden in jast s ie Senate. pped^I, was a personal attack,” Simpson ‘id. “I certainly heard it that way.” -st tiniilSimpson added, “I’ve never heard Oganitiniuch guff in my life.” d. Photo by ERIC EVAN LEE Long shadows Camille Smith, a program advisor in the Student Programs Office, enjoys reading on the stairs outside of the MSC on her lunch hour. The warm weather brought many students and employees outside Thursday. tough sentences not guaranteed U.S. woman killed in Salvadoran attack United Press International SAN SALVADOR — An Amer ican woman was shot to death Thurs day when caught with her husband and two children in a combat zone, the U.S. Embassy and other sources said. There were conflicting reports on who killed the woman, whose identity has not been released. A Salvadoran priest who adminis tered last rites to the woman said lef tist guerrillas “apparently” shot her, but a Salvadoran official told the embassy that government soldiers fired at her. There was a lot of combat on the road, the “Military Route,” said the Rev. Jose Luis Calderon, who gave the unidentified woman last rites of the Catholic Church in the eastern border crossing of El Amatillo. The priest said he had received unconfirmed reports that one Salva doran civilian was killed and another wounded in the fighting. Father Calderon, in a telephone interview with United Press Interna tional, said the man, woman and the two children were traveling in “a large bus” from western El Salvador toward the Honduran border when the vehi cle came under fire. The bus appa rently was the family’s private vehicle. “Apparently it was the guerrillas,” the priest said when asked who was responsible for the shooting. U.S. Embassy spokesman Donald Hamilton said the mission had re ceived information from an unidenti fied Salvadoran official that govern ment soldiers fired on the vehicle. “According to a Salvadoran offi cial, someone missed a roadblock near Santa Rosa de Lima. Soldiers opened fire and one U.S. citizen was killed,” Hamilton said. Two U.S. consular officers flew in a helicopter to the area to investigate the report, Hamilton said. Hamilton said the embassy could not give details on the American citizen killed because of Privacy Act restrictions. A Defense Ministry spokesman said he had no information on the incident. Residents of Santa Rosa de Lima, 67 miles east of San Salvador, re ported heavy combat at three points on the Military Route highway west of the city Thursday. The incident reportedly occurred near a hamlet called El Limon, 5 miles west of Santa Rosa de Lima, Father Calderon said. The priest said the woman’s family were tourists apparently traveling to Honduras. “I was called from the border. She was a Catholic and I went to give her last rites. She was already dead when I arrived,” he said, adding that when he left the border post at noon a helicop ter was arriving. Military sources said the body was flown in a helicopter to the port city of La Union, capital of the province of the same name, where judicial au thorities would register the death. In response to recent guerrilla bombings of a civilian plane, the American Embassy ordered all U.S. military advisers to stay off commuter flights, a spokesman said Thursday. Last Friday, a rebel-planted mine exploded underneath a commuter plane landing near San Miguel, 70 miles east of San Salvador, where four American military advisers were wait ing to take off aboard another flight. A 50-year-old passenger died at the scene, the pilot died Tuesday of injuries suffered after one leg was amputated and four civilian passen gers were seriously injured in the attack. U.S. advisers have been ordered not to fly on civilian commuter air lines as a result of the incident, the spokesman said. Radio Venceremos vowed to con tinuing fighting the advisers, “who have invaded our country to help the dictatorship and to make war against our people.” Negotiations to reduce federal deficit underway United Press International WASHINGTON — Treasury Sec retary Donald Regan said Thursday “everything is on the table” in negotia tions to reduce the massive federal deficit, but made clear the administra tion will fight anyone who reaches for a tax increase. Appearing before the congression al Joint Economic Committee to give his “State of the Economy” message, Regan predicted a continued strong recovery this year without high infla tion. But much of the discussion fo cused on plans for high-level discus sions between the White House and congressional leaders on ways to re duce the $180 billion deficit. Democrats have said they fear Pres ident Reagan will not yield to any effort at trimming defense spending or raising taxes, but Regan said, “No thing is non-negotiable. Everything is on the table.” At the same time, when asked if a tax increase would be acceptable, he replied, “In a down payment situa tion, it is not necessary.” He said his idea of a “down pay ment” on the deficit would be to trim about $ 100 billion over three years — $20 billion in fiscal 1985, $30 billion in 1986 and $50 billion in 1987. “Why bother to increase taxes when you can get it through loophole closings,” he said. Regan predicted that closing tax loopholes would generate about $31 billion over three years. He refused to give a list of specific loopholes, but did offer an example of the “type of thing we think should be closed” — invest ment tax credits for non-profit opera tions such as colleges and city govern ments that sell their buildings to in vestors seeking tax shelters and then lease them back for nominal fees. A bill now before the House Ways and Means Committee deals with such situations. Regan said the administration de cided against proposing contingency taxes — which would be put into effect only after specific spending cuts were approved this year because a similar proposal was “laughed out of existence last year in Congress. Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., asked Regan to outline where spending cuts should come and referred to recent reports that Budget Director David Stockman has said that in practical terms there is little room left for cuts. “We can cut in all areas of the budget,” Regan said. Regan also said the president’s fiscal 1985 budget, to be sent to Congress next week, would include a recom mendation to increase the limit on tax-deferred individual retirement accounts. Under the proposal mar ried couples with only one earner would be allowed to put $4,000 into an IRA, up from $2,250 now. In his formal message, Regan pre dicted inflation will rise from 3.8 per cent in 1983 to about 5 percent next year and said unemployment should drop from 8.2 percent to about 7.7 percent. He said the gross national product — the overall measurement of the nation’s goods and services out put — would grow at a healthy 4.5 percent rate this year. Drunk driving laws reviewed the By KELLEY SMITH Staff writer [though the Texas congress has asst-cl new “tougher” laws against hinkdriving, Brazos County District udge W. T. McDonald Jr. says the Ws are no guarantee of tougher sen- gting. ■You can write all kinds of tough iws. but you have no guarantee of %her sentencing,” McDonald said. It|all in the application of the law.” ttaws are changed all the time, he fl. “These new laws are no revolu- ion they’ve just received a lot of pub- iciiy, probably an inordinate ufount.” McDonald said the laws against lr|nk driving have always been ||gh The laws are not effective as ■ should be when they are not ap- $£d correctly, he said. ■Historically what’s happened has •cen the stiffer the laws, the more ffort to circumvent them,” McDo- 1 said. IcDonald said he has always asses- H tough sentences against persons ’ guilty of driving while intoxi- Ifd. “I’ve been giving them tough sent ences all along,” he said “We’ve had tough laws on the books, but the ap plication has been lenient.” Battalion graphics by Karl Franklin McDonald said most attorneys that come through his court know he gives tough sentences — penitentiary sent ences. That’s why the attorneys usual ly asks for a trial by jury. “The tougher the judges get, the more jury trials,” McDonald said. Jury trials can either result in an acquittal, a hung jury, which would result in a mistrial, or light sentenc ing, he said. The chances for the de fendant are a lot better with a jury, McDonald said. The judge acting on the case can see through more because he sees it every day, he said. The defense attor ney stands a better chance of dazzling the jury than a judge, he said. McDonald cited 11 cases his court handled this summer within a period of two weeks. All were tried by a jury. Nine of those resulted in either hung juries or not guilty verdicts. McDo nald said the results would have been different had he ruled on the cases. However, there are a few things about the new laws that make them appealing from the court’s point of view, assistant county attorney Jack Phariss said. The appealing factors are the legal intoxication guideline, the use of videotapes during arrests and the admissibility in court of refusal to take an intoxilyzer, blood or breath test, Phariss said. A person with a blood alcohol con centration of . 10 is legally considered intoxicated rather than being pre sumed to be intoxicated. The new law alleviates the courts from having to decide whether a person was drunk, Phariss said. The videotape machines will also help in the courtroom to let the jury or judge see if a person was acting drunk at the time of arrest, he said. The courts now have enough ammunition to counteract people wanting to take a case to court, he said. While the defendants have less to lose, they also have less chance to get away, he said. While Phariss said tests such as the intoxilyzer will help take the doubt from thejudge’s andjury’s mind as to a defendant’s intoxication, the de fense will be working to bring doubt about the validity of the tests. Local attorney Tyler Moore said the tests are not an accurate measure See DWI page 10 In Today’s Battalion Local • Bryan’s Midwest Video and Community Cablevision will soon become one company — so look for higher cable subscription prices. See story page 3. • Now’s your opportunity to race through campus in a sports car. For more info see page 6. • Texas A&M’s men’s and women’s tennis teams begin action for 1984 this weekend. See story page 13. State • An Austin man cashes in $1,200 in pennies. See story page 7. • Baylor dorm students are now allowed to put their posters of nude girls and beer products back on their walls, after being told to take them down. See story page 12. National • A 66-year-old Florida man becomes the First person to be executed in 1984. See story page 3. World • Poland reacts to the nuclear war film “The Day After.” See reaction page 5.