1 ^W*'B_ TexasA&M m_m_ 1 • The Battalion > nulitan; e! > tor is to rci eudeil ^Vo!. 82 No. 164 CJSPS 045360 8 pages g more b College Station, Texas Friday, June 20, 1986 tie cover, ' that dq II enroll 1 [ o do sot’ tlie conic Reagan applauds need# „ arms offer House urges adherence to SALT II xtremeh e knowlet rt or of heart gan pn diatelv, Vickv ( io, hade iv, a fatals eart tnua ildrenakt na Linda rowtti owth tura GNPpr n the (oe ■ficit. : Chairs enungon in theG ided fun’! •riousneit osinq - s can: '" I ( ussimi.' GLASS BORO, N.J. (AP) — Presi- ient Reagan, in his first formal re- ponse to Soviet leader Mikhail Gor- jachev’s latest arms control offer, taid Thursday “it appears that the Soviets have begun to make a serious effort” toward negotiating an agreement. Reagan, in a speech delivered at a New Jersey high school near the site >f a 1967 U.S.-Soviet summit, said the Soviet offer cannot be accepted without change, but could be the ba sis for serious negotiations. Citing what he called “fresh devel- pments” in several areas, the presi dent said: “We believe that possibly an atmosphere does indeed exist that will allow for serious dis- WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted approval Thursday of a resolution urging continued U.S. ad herence to SALT II, the unratified nuclear arms control treaty that President Reagan says he will not use in the future to guide decisions on weapons deployment. The Democratic-controlled House approved the non-binding resolution on a 256-145 vote after liv e hours of debate and following a 222-187 defeat of a Republican- backed proposal that would have ba sically endorsed Reagan’s decision. Before final passage, the House voted 406-0 approval of another Re- publican-sponsored proposal saying the chamber supports the efforts of U.S. arms control negotiators in Ge neva to reduce superpower nuclear arsenals. On the final vote, 219 Democrats and 37 Republicans voted for the SALT resolution. It was opposed by 37 Democrats and 128 Republicans. At about the same time, the Re- publican-controlled Senate Armed Services Committee voted 10-9 pas sage of a proposal by Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., which also urges con tinued compliance with SALT' II. The vote came in a closed session of the panel as it wrote its version of a Pentagon spending bill. Hart’s pro posal, which he announced later, was adopted as an amendment to the bill. Reagan’s May 27 announcement that he would not be bound in the future by the limits in the unratified SALT II has touched off widespread debate on Capitol Hill, along with several legislative proposals. The House resolution was the f irst measure to reach the floor of ei ther chamber, but a similar resolu tion has been introduced in the Re publican-controlled Senate. Also pending in both chambers are bills that would ban the spending of any money to build nuclear weap ons that would exceed the limits set by the 1 979 treaty. The resolution approved Thurs day was chiefly sponsored by Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla., chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, which voted 29-1 1 passage last week. Rep. William Broomfield of Mich igan, ranking Republican on the panel, offered the Republican alter native that was voted down shortly before the resolution passed. Broomfield’s proposal would have Reagan adhere to the SALT limits as long as the Soviets do likewise. Since Reagan says the Soviets don’t adhere to the pact, that would mean Rea gan’s new policy could go ahead. House Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill Jr., D-Mass., said Thursday that “the president’s making a mistake” by proposing to discard the treaty. He argued that the move “gives tremen dous advantage to the Russians” who can build up weapons more quickly than the United States. ;er$/ , Sat- ur ersity as^ SAD nt Nissa' 0% *' ■Nissaf at tin* Of the Soviet offer made in Ge neva, Reagan said, “We cannnot ac cept these particular proposals with out change, but it appears that the Soviets have begun to make a serious effort.” In his speech to graduating se niors, Reagan noted that little had come of the 1967 summit between President Lyndon B. Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin at nearby Glassboro State College. “I have come here today to say that the Glassboro Summit was not enough, that indeed the Geneva Summit was not enough — that talk alone, in short, is not enough,” he said. “I have come here to invite Mr. Gorbachev to join me in taking ac tion— action in the name of peace.” The president noted that he re cently wrote Gorbachev to press for high-level talks on summit prepara tions. No response has been re ceived, White House officials said. The school gymnasium was [jammed to its capacity of 1,200 peo- [ple and a crowd gathered outside lis- Itened to the president’s speech over la public address system. “The time has come to move for- Iward,” Reagan said during his Jspeech. “The goal here is not com- Iplicated. I am suggesting that we Wvee nov on how many new bigger, land more accurate missiles can be tbuilt, but on how to reduce and ulti- linately eliminate all nuclear mis- Isiles.” Cool Blues Sisters Tina and T'heresa Thomas and Jen nifer Williams, right, listen to a blues perfor mance at Thursday’s Juneteenth celebration at Sadie Thomas Memorial Park in Bryan. Photo by Anthony S. Casper The concert kicked off three days of festivi ties which will include a free swim at the park on Friday, a parade in Bryan on Saturday and religious services on Sunday. Senate approves partial deduction for state sales tax Guilty as charged FBI agent Miller convicted of espionage, bribery LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard JW. Miller, the only FBI agent ever laccused of spying, was convicted of ■espionage and bribery Thursday by la jury that rejected his claim that he ■was trying to infiltrate the Soviet |KGB as a double agent to save his |flagging career. Miller, the pudgy agent who Iworked in the counterintelligence ■section of the FBI’s Los Angeles of- Ifice, sat motionless and stared at the jurors as the verdict was announced bin the case that rocked the FBI when it broke nearly two years ago. Miller, 49, could be sentenced to life in prison. Miller was found guilty of con spiring to pass classified documents to the Soviet Union, of copying clas sified documents and of delivering them to a foreign government with knowledge that they would be used to the advantage of a foreign power, the Soviet Union, and to the disad vantage of the United States. He also was found guilty of com municating the documents to a known representative of the Soviets and of soliciting $50,000 in gold and $ 15,000 in cash. The panel had told the judge they were deadlocked on one count only, whether or not Miller had accepted an expensive trench coat from his girlfriend as a bribe. The govern ment moved to drop the seventh count, and U.S. District Judge David Kenyon granted the motion. As Miller was being led out of the courtroom in handcuffs, he was asked for comment by reporters. He smiled and said: “Let’s say thank God for the court of appeals.” Miller’s attorneys, Joel Levine and Stanley Greenberg, said they were confident the verdict would be re versed on appeal. The jury, which deliberated 21 hours over four days, was the second panel to consider the complicated case. The first jury to hear the case said it could not reach a unanimous verdict. In the second trial, the govern ment presented essentially the same case against Miller, portraying him See Spy, page 6 WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Thursday approved a par tial deduction for some state and lo cal sales taxes and agreed to a final vote next week on a radical plan for overhauling the federal income tax. To help pay for the sales tax amendment, the Senate agreed to require that every person age 5 or older who is claimed as a dependent have a Social Security card. They agreed to this mainly in an effort to slow tax cheating by falsely claiming exemptions. “We’re in the home stretch,” Ma jority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said near the end of the 10th day of de bate on the bill. A few hours earlier, facing a stack of 200 or more amendments that had stalled final action on the bill, Dole had threat ened a weekend session — even the pending holiday recess — unless senators got moving. As the day wore on, amendments began disappearing; 200 dropped to fewer than 30. Then, 30 became 60- plus. Then, Dole and Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., put together the agreement that im posed a 4 p.m. deadline for a final vote on the bill. Most of the amendments would benefit only one industry or project. And those provisions were heading for approval as one big amendment whose fate would be left to the Sen ate-House conference that will write the final version of the bill. The bill came out of the Finance Committee with 175 such amend ments included, and well over 200 more have been suggested since de bate on the measure began June 4. With its passage in sight, several sen ators were chafing at the leaders’ re sistance to amendments and some accused managers of the bill of play ing favorites. For the second day in a row, the Senate defeated an attempt to de liver more of the bill’s tax cuts to middle-income people. A 92-7 vote killed an amendment by Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., that would have given larger tax cuts to those with in comes between $30,000 and $40,000 and shifted the burden to U.S. businesses operating abroad. But on a 94-1 vote, with Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., in opposi tion, the Senate adopted a non-bind ing resolution saying negotiators should place a high priority on help ing the middle class when the final bill is written. Meantime, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the House Ways and Means Com mittee, said Democratic tax-writers in the House are “concerned with how the middle-income family will be treated” in the final tax bill. The plan passed by the House would give more relief to those taxpayers than would the Senate bill. Adopted by voice vote was an amendment by Sen. James McClure, R-Idaho, allowing Individual Retire ment Account investments in gold and silver coins. The amendment allowing a de duction for some state and local sales taxes was accepted by voice vote with the concurrence of the bill’s man ager, Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore. Under the amendment, a person whose state and local sales taxes were higher than state and local income taxes could deduct 60 percent of the excess. The amendment would benefit any taxpayer in any state who pays more sales tax than state and local income tax, including residents of Texas and 13 other states. Provost to use ‘open door’ to improve communication By Tom Ownbey Reporter When Donald McDonald moves into the Coke Building the first of July, he is taking with him an open door policy to facilitate better communication between Texas A&M students, faculty and administration. “In my ideal world, all the aca demic administrators should have some involvement with the stu dents,” said McDonald, A&M’s new provost and vice president for academic affairs. As head of the civil engi neering department, McDonald said, he enjoyed a close working relationship wdth students and faculty. As provost McDonald expects to spend more time on manage rial tasks. But, he said, he doesn’t want to lose contact with the stu dents and faculty. The student body and the un dergraduate program are of vital interest to him, McDonald added. “The undergraduate program is the source of our strength and is a very important part of the University,” he said. Donald McDonald He said while he agrees with the administration’s increased emphasis on research and grad uate programs, he remains aware of undergraduate needs. McDonald said one of these needs is a well-rounded core cur riculum. For this reason, he said, he supports the Faculty Senate’s proposed core curriculum. The proposed core curriculum increases the emphasis on liberal arts and modern languages. “I’ve been on the side of the core curriculum since it was first devised,” he said. “I’m delighted that I heard the president say he was going to accept it — at least in its general shape. “The foundation of this Uni versity was the agricultural and engineering sciences. That was 110 years ago . . .. Getting to be a major university requires a bal ance. We are achieving a balance. “We have a good college of sci ence, a good college of geoscience but an important part is to have a good college of liberal arts. I think we are achieving that and Fm delighted to see it.” McDonald said there has been a lot of discussion in the engi neering department about the core curriculum. A major argument against the core curriculum is that it can pre vent an engineering student from graduating in four years, McDon ald said. But he said the engineering de partment may have to re-evaluate See Provost, page 6 Police clamp curfews on black townships JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Police used their emergency powers Thursday to impose curfews on dozens of black townships, as strikes spread among black workers who demand that their union lead ers be released from jail. Bishop Desmond Tutu took the archbishop of Canterbury’s special envoy, Terry Waite, to the court room wedding of a black activist who is on trial for treason. White voters in Port Elizabeth, an auto manufacturing center on the Indian Ocean, voted 6,104 to 4,957 against integrating their beaches. Government spokesman Leon Mellet said in Pretoria that three more people were killed in unrest, including a white man missing since last weekend, bringing the total to 48 in the week-old state of emergency. Two of the victims were blacks slain by other blacks in a tribal homeland, while the third, a badly burned body found in a black town ship near Uitenhage, was identified by Mellet as that of Lodewyk Vlooh. No details on Vlooh’s death were disclosed. Foreign Minister R.F. Botha said a U.S. House of Representatives vote to impose a total trade embargo and order all American companies out of this country showed a disregard for the welfare of South Africa’s blacks. In London, the human rights or ganization Amnesty International is sued a statement saying five whites were arrested last Saturday in Port Elizabeth by security police while at tending a briefing with a lawyer on the terms of the state of emergency. Those taken into custody included a mother of two, Amnesty said. The new curfews in dozens of townships around Port Elizabeth, Uitenhage and other south-central industrial centers run from 9 p.m. to 4 a.m. Police also prohibit possession of T-shirts or other articles bearing the names of any of 47 anti-apart heid and civic organizations. Authorities had said Port Eliza beth townships produced the worst violence in the country Monday, when blacks mounted a general strike to commemorate the 10th an niversary of bloody riots in Soweto. Several thousand black workers in the Johannesburg area held sit- down strikes in at least 50 outlets of six retail chains. White businessmen, worried by the difficulty of negotiat ing with leaderless union members, arranged a meeting Friday with See South Africa, page 6 Farm crisis workers gather ARLINGTON (AP) — Farm ers and ranchers attending a “farm crisis” meeting complained Thursday that farmers are being put out of business by an unsym pathetic federal government, an unmerciful Farmers Home Ad ministration, and a useless 1985 farm bill. Necie Gresham said she paid $290 per acre for her 640-acre Lubbock farm when she bought it 12 years ago. When it was fore closed, a lien holder sold it for $52 an acre. “He stole it, and the FmHA sat idly by and let him do that,” Gre sham said. “It left us nothing to pay our debt. It’s cruelty. It’s un fairness.” Gresaham was one of about 200 people, most of them farmers and ranchers, attending the Na tional Farm Crisis Workers Con ference at the University of Texas at Arlington. The event, sponsored jointly by the Texas Department of Ag riculture and FarmAid, brought together farm crisis hotline work ers and members of farm advo cacy groups from various states who have tried to help farmers during agriculture’s tough times. “In Texas, this is the only thing farmers can do in their defense against the bureacratic terrorism — fight back,” Gresham said. State Agriculture Commis sioner Jim Hightower told the conference, “Agriculture overall is in a disaster situation.” Hightower took pokes at the Reagan administration, saying 125 years ago the national gov ernment took interest in farmers with legislation such as the Homestead Act. “Today our government is doing all that it can to take back the land,” Hightower said. “It’s not just a matter of losing a num ber of farmers, but we’re losing our best farmers. These are peo ple who are efficient, productive, innovative and broke."