1 to chol- ; fion | met. cyme ! y ob- igton ; your ; uebr 1 State finance crisis may cause budget cuts, Caperton says. —Page 10 A&M duo trying to knock out nationally-ranked opponents — Page 13 The Battalion >eUtt S— — 'ol. 83 No. 92 (JSPS 075360 16 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, February 6, 1986 of Ai- Verm ’ Rud- 8. Ap- ie Stu- 1980 V Si. Br^ac- ■School A&M. nmcrct one in- • in Df- ed ilem is i 10 compai on's lanl filed to (lead# Aon takes people lostage >n plane GRAPEVINE — A knife-wielding an took 221 passengers hostage )oanl a Delta Air Lines jumbo jet te Wednesday, and held them at idlas-Fort Worth International Air- ort, officials said. Hrport spokesman Joe Dealey lid ail the passengers were allowed (leave thejet within two hours. Tlis' man held a knife at the throat fa male steward, and the crew was •aboard the plane, Dealey said. He plane was Flight 139, which was lund for Los Angeles from Fort auderdale, Fla., with a scheduled op in Dallas, Dealey said. Agent John Hippard said two F'BI ■tiators were sent to the scene. ■iere were no reports of injuries Ward the Lockheed L1011 jet, ealey said. • He said officials did not know if Ionian had help in taking over the aft or when he took over thejet. See related story, page 12 Twinkle, Twinkle Although security lights at the construction site near the Zachry Engineering Center make the Photo by MIKE SANCHEZ area easier to police, they also make a picturesque view in the darkness. reform bill to go before Senate A&M pension plan in danger again ; resulc iers are« ingested t jnal caK ts incontt isbestosb lors in ri BySONDRA PICKARD Staff Writer The future of the primary retire- ent program used by many em- byees at Texas colleges and uni- jrtities is in the hands of the U.S. (nate this week as it begins hear- onthe 1985 Tax Reform Propo- , Hoping to save the Texas Optio- Retirement Program, which is e primary pension plan used by nit 30,000 administrators and fac- jagel) lymembers at 95 colleges and uni- pities, officials at Texas A&M and rh intwgjjr Texas schools are meeting to ned (' iy with Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of ican pn' Bs, a member of the Senate Fi- ;n mad-Be Committee, st ration T Di' [Participating in the forum are Sys- to Chancellor Arthur G. Hansen, in of &M President Frank E. Vandiver, littee, ■ fe University of Texas chancellor n adntii'M president, and the presidents of ionaldtaW University of Houston and e've g r '|^s Tech University. •st creMMichael Lytle, special assistant to r greaio I chancellor for federal relations, ys he and his counterpart at UT uiwedtehve been working closely with nieiideit'Hten and the staff of the Senate -re H^pnce Committee to make sure I asajuw understand how the tax plan, jresiW'Bh includes the ORP, affects dv to m^Hs universities. ,, to ge: ■ In case lawmakers do recognize ducts, i ( | need for a change, Lytle and educatio 11 ® Honea, A&M director of insur- Ice and risk management, and ^iij staff have developed some al- ^jjjjS^mative language to the part of the I ii plan effecting ORP. They also H met with a staff member who irks for Rep. J.J. Pickle, a member the House Ways and Means Com mittee, to discuss the disadvantages of the plan. “We’re trying to make sure they understand that if the Senate passes the tax bill the way it was written in the House, it adversely effects our ORP,” Lytle says. “Informing people and showing them alternatives is about all we can do right now.” As part of its effort to propose re form in the tax code, the House Ways and Means Committee drafted legislation in 1985 which contains amendments to a section of the In ternal Revenue Code involving tax See Pension, page 12 Tax bill may increase cost of giving By MONA L. PALMER Staff Writer Private gifts and support to Texas A&M during the last fiscal year exceeded $40 million, but the tax reform bill pending be fore the Senate could directly af fect the cost of giving charitable gifts, says Charles Salomon, A&M’s associate director for planned giving. A report from the A&M chan cellor’s office says these gifts di rectly benefit student aid, faculty funding and research and exten sion services. Salomon says the bill, already passed by the House, will have two effects on charitable gifts — it will change the tax rate and re strict the deductibility of appre ciated property. A person in the 50 percent tax bracket pays 50 cents on every ad ditional dollar he earns. If the rate is reduced to 35 percent, then the person pays 35 cents on every additional dollar he earns. If a person makes a charitable gift, it’s going to cost them 65 cents on the dollar instead of 50 cents, Salomon says. “So when you change the tax bracket you’ve immediately in creased the cost of giving,” he says. “But there’s a reverse side to that — they should have more funds availible to them to give.” “When you change the tax bracket you’ve im mediately increased the cost of giving. ” Charles Salomon, Texas A&M associate director for planned giving. Salomon says people who give gifts usually will make them re gardless of the tax rate. “If they’re so motivated to make a gift, they’re going to do it,” he says. “The problem is when they sit down and look at what it’s going to cost them, then they may vary the size of that gift. “Most of our funds are re stricted by the donors for a par ticular purpose.” A large amount is restricted for student aid, but gifts to the fac ulty have increased, Salomon says. A donor can make a gift with any property of value — not just cash. “We receive gems, paintings, machinery — anything that has value can be used to make a gift,” he says. Salomon says items such as land, a common gift, appreciate in value since purchase. Land bought at $250 an acre 40 years ago might be worth $1,500 an acre today, so it’s an economic way to make a gift be cause the donor can deduct the fair market value and not have to realize the appreciation, he says. Salomon says the House pro posal will treat that appreciation as a tax preference item for the purposes of the minimum tax. The minimum tax treats every thing equally and insures tax pay ment on certain monies, he says. Sometimes the minimum tax won’t apply to a tax preference item but the item must be checked, he says. When donors give a gift of ap preciated property, the donor gives up potential cash value, he says, and that’s why people op pose taxing apprecitated value. Reagan asking for $994 billion in fiscal 1987 Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan, beginning a five-year drive to eliminate federal deficits, pro posed a $994 billion fiscal 1987 bud get Wednesday that would cut deeply into domestic programs but continue increases in military spend ing. In compliance with a new budget law, it projects a deficit of $144 bil lion, which still would be the fourth largest shortfall in history. The president asked Congress to have faith that his recommendations will do the job, but many legislators said his plan was economically ques tionable and politically impossible. Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., said “I don’t think there are 25 votes in the United States Senate for the bud get,” and Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wisc., chairman of the House Armed Serv ices Committee, called the budget “DBA — dead before arrival.” Even an influential Republican, Sen. Pete V. Domenici of New Mex ico, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said the deficit goal mandated by the new law could not be met with Reagan’s proposed spending cuts alone. “The solution, in my judgment, will be a revenue component (tax in crease) to glue it together. . . . The time for playing games is past,” Do menici told a nearing on the new budget. Reagan again ruled out general tax increases to trim deficits and said that in addition to broad spending cuts, some programs should be elim inated, including Amtrak, the pas senger rail service, and the Inter state Commerce Commission. In all, about 90 programs would be killed. The president also proposed sell ing federal assets such as the Bonne ville and Southwestern power mar keting administrations, some outstanding loans owed to the fed eral government, and federal land and buildings. And he recommended requiring able adult welfare recipients to look for work, increasing premiums for Medicare insurance for the elderly, and capping Medicaid spending for the nation’s poor. Reagan is seeking a nearly 12 per cent increase for military spending authority, before adjusting for infla tion. The plan would continue every major weapon system under devel opment unabated. In a message accompanying the proposals he submitted to Congress, Reagan said that to meet the targets of the new law aimed at forcing a balanced budget by 1991, we must “resist the pleadings of special inter ests whose ‘era of power’ in Wash ington must be brought to an end — for taxpayers as a whole can no longer be expected to carry them on their backs.” However, he added, “We can hardly back away from our defense build-up without creating confusion among friends and adversaries alike See ’87 budget, page 12 Also see related story, page 12 Students didn’t affect hunger study: doctor By MONA L. PALMER Staff Writer The number of college students in Brazos County did not flaw the Har vard study that stated the county was one of the hungriest in the state, the chairman of the Physicians Task Force on Hunger in America said Wednesday. Dr. Larry Brown said the study compared the number of impov erished people in the county to the percentage of poor people receiving food stamps. A county that didn’t allocate a proportional amount of food stamps to the poor was considered a hungry county. The contention that the number of college students flawed the study is wrong, Brown said, because under federal policy full-time students aren’t eligible for food stamps and the poverty level doesn’t decrease when students aren’t counted. If researchers assumed 100 per cent of the students living off cam pus were deducted from the study, Brazos County would still be a hun ger county because of its low partici- ation in the food stamp program, e said. Brazos County’s participation in the Federal Food Stamp Program is less than 33 percent, Brown said. “We believe it’s time to put the de bate about the existence of hunger behind us,” Brown said. “You’ve documented it in your state, and we’ve documented it nationally—it’s time to do something about it.” Brown said Texas, compared to other states, does have a serious hunger problem, but he sees a lot of strength in Texas. Response to the Harvard study is sometimes “outsiders get out — we’ll take care of our own,” Brown said. But this is 1986, he said, and what goes on is everybody’s business. “We want to know why this fed eral program that worked so well in the past is not working now — why the participation rate has gone from 65 to 55 percent,” he said. Brown said food stamp officials know the program participation is low but say they need more workers to reach more people. He quoted one official as saying, “We see the hungry people and we have to turn a lot of them away be cause the government ties our hands.” \lew rules for student elections at A&M outlined By FRANK SMITH Staff Writer In an attempt to sift through the ambigu- of past codes, the Student Government 6Ction Commission has outlined several 5 1 procedures for candidates to follow in ^spring’s elections, Alan Moore, election pfcmmissioner, said. One of the new guidelines calls for filing be open to the public, Moore said. In past fictions, candidates were unaware of their "ttpetidon until after filing closed, he •d. This year, a list containing the names those who have filed for each office will [posted in the Pavilion sometime during etniddle of the filing period, he said. , Another difference in this year’s elec ts is that the campaign expenditure limit ^each office will cover both general and Biff elections, Moore said. fVVhat we decided was that for student body president the maximum expenditure is $300 on the campaign,” Moore said. “U- sually if you’re in a runoff, they give you an extension of money, say $50. “Well, we’re reading the election regula tions as saying that that’s $300 maximum (for the entire campaign). There’s going to be a little bit of planning involved. It’s going to require more of the candidates to plan, to utilize the personal skills — instead of flooding (people) with flyers. We’d like to see a more personal aspect. “No person should be discouraged (from filing) on the basis of money. A campaign should be based on personal contact.” The emphasis on more strategic cam paigns and more personalized campaigns are two of the underlying objectives run ning through the commission’s election code clarifications, Moore said. Another, he said, is that each candidate will be held accountable for his own actions as well as the actions of the people working for his campaign. Thus, all campaign materials must be ac companied by an itemized receipt, includ ing information on where the material was purchased, date purchased and the candi date’s signature, Moore said. “We want the candidate’s signature on there for this reason — then he is account able for it,” Moore said. “He can’t say, ‘Someone in my campaign purchased this and I was unaware of it.’ ” If a receipt is not obtainable, that is, if the materials were given to the candidate, or if the candidate is using old or recycled material, the value of those materials will be assessed at the current market rate, Moore said. The market rate will be the average price on standard items as determined by the election commission after consulting lo cal hardware, lumber and printing busi nesses, he said. “Gifts and things like that are considered just as if you had to go out and buy it your self,” he said. Moore added that if a candidate does not use some materials in his campaign and de ducts the value of the unused materials from his campaign expenditures, the candi date must present the unused materials to the commission for verification. Another election code clarification de fines the procedure one should take if he questions the legality of another’s cam- paign. “Questions in which another candidate’s integrity is involved should be reported im mediately to the election commissioners,” Moore said. “They need to come before us before they’re publicized campus-wide. “Questions regarding the legality of cam paigning, as well as the misconduct things will have to be submitted in writing to Chris (Gavras, election co-commissioner) and my self— to our box in 221 Pavilion —no later than 6 p.m. each day while campaigning is going on. “We will go through them and post type written, signed responses the next day no later than 10 a.m.” Moore said the election commission also will try to put new life into the candidates’ debate for student body president this year. “In the past, the candidates’ debate at times has digressed into more or less (a mat ter of) one candidate’s supporters bad gering the other candidates’,” he said. “A small group of people attend. Everyone al ready knows who they’re going to vote for. “We want to see a different type of de bate this year. We’d like to see about seven people from different aspects of our college community represented on a panel.” These panelists would pose questions to the candidates during the debate, Moore said.