F —^-TexasA&M —^ - _g M • The Battalion 2 No. 174 USPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, July 10, 1986 olvesatbay’ [acuity losses under control jespite A&M budget cuts S By Scott Sutherland City Editor By Mary Frances Scott Senior Stuff Writer jexas A&M department heads avithey haven’t seen a severe loss pculty due to budget cuts, but Jexas’ economic conditions de- eriorate further they may not be ble to hold the wolves at bay. ■exas A&M administrators eai an all-out assault on faculty ylchools looking to lure A&M acuity as the Texas economy bbs lower and lower and A&M’s mdget follows the tide. Dr. Clinton Phillips, Dean of ■acuities, says departments are Bjng an increase in faculty raid ittempts as the Texas economy ippears to worsen, jfhe vultures do circle,” Phil- 8 says. “And we’ve been among e vultures in times past, but iov we’re seeing the other end of jie spectrum.” Phillips says tight purse strings live forced administrators to tMtch their budgets to match mbicle offers to prestigious l&M faculty. ■When a dean says, T’ve just [bt to have x amount of dollars,’ ptry to find it,” he says. He calls his money “shark repellent.” Board of Regents Executive jeeretary Bill Presnal says, “the aard is aware of the problem nd is determined to see that aiding does not occur.” Presnal said he cotdd not say ■thing further about what the Kjard’s action might be. He did ay that when cases were re- §wed the board would support strong committment to main lining A&M’s teaching excel- ?nce. But the deans and department eads must deal with the raiding i ihe trenches. And although &M is winning the war the bat es are becoming more compet- ive. ndustrialist killed in terrorist bombing College of Agriculture Dean H.O. Kunkel says his department has lost four associate professors to raiding universities. Kunkel said he hopes the salary structure for his department’s professors will deter future raiding. “Right now I’m afraid there is a lot of wishful thinking that these other universities will go away and leave us alone,” he says. Chemistry department head Dr. Robert Tribble says he has lost two good professors this year. Both teachers, he says, will be dif ficult to replace. Replacing teachers may prove a giant obstacle next spring when colleges traditionally recruit pro fessors. For A&M recruiters the problems next spring will be two fold — how to get them, and how to keep them. Several department heads say they did most of their hiring be fore the budget crunch appeared. Had budget restraints come even a month earlier the faculty situa tion might be worse. Dr. W.D. Turner, mechanical engineering department head, says his department hasn’t lost any professors yet, but they hired five new professors only a month before the economy hit bottom. “If the budget crunch had hap pened in September or October I don’t know how successful we would have been at getting new people to come here,” he says. Dr. Walter Haisler, Aerospace Engineering department head, blames some of the faculty flight on wild rumors of budget cuts and layof fs. But for neighboring state uni versities how bad it really is has become painfully apparent. Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge has seen more than its share of raiding. Officials at the university report that they have lost almost 100 faculty and staff members. Report urges ‘porn crackdown’ WASHINGTON (AP) — The At torney General’s Commission on Pornography, releasing its final re port Wednesday, issued a call to arms against what is says is an $8 bil- lion-a-year porn industry. Attorney General Edwin Meese, who appointed the commission’s 11 members more than a year ago, re ceived the report at a news confer ence with the panel’s chairman, Henry Hudson, a U.S. attorney who first won a reputation as a porn fighting county prosecutor in Vir ginia. “I'm not concerned about any censorship being fostered by this document,” Meese said. “I can guar antee to you that there will be no censorship ... in violation of the First Amendment.” The 2,000-page report links hard core porn to sex crimes and contains 92 recommendations for federal, state and local governments to crack down on pornography in the United States. The commission’s estimate of the size of the porno industry is based on testimony taken the past year from a variety of law enforcement witnesses. The $8 billion includes revenue from child pornography, vi deocassettes, adult movie theaters and adult magazines, excluding mainstream publications such as Playboy and Penthouse. Hudson told the news conference that over the past decade there has been a surge in “more violent and more sexually explicit pornography” in all forms, from videocassettes to dirty magazines. The commission’s single most controversial action occurred when its executive director, Alan Sears, mailed a letter last February to nearly tw'o dozen convenience and drug store chains which sell Playboy and Penthouse, saying the store chains had been identified in testi mony given to the panel as distribu tors of pornography. More than 8,000 drug and conve nience stores have stopped selling adult magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse since the first of the year. T he report has been condemned by civil liberties groups as a move to ward censorship. 100,000 SA voters needed to put cap on city spending SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A strong voter turnout will be necessary to de- leat ;t referendum on a proposed (.ip on city spending, Mayor Henry ( isneros says. Cisneros, who opposes the limit, said a turnout of at least 100.()()() vol ets is nec essary to defeat the propo sal Aug. 9. I he spending limit pro posed bv conservative G.A. Stubbs has solid support from at least la.000 citizens* Cisneros said Tues- dav. Supporters of the measure are mote likely to vote than opponents, ( isneros said. The mayor said he based his prediction on the number that voted last year to defeat a pro posal to fluoridate the citv’s water supply. St ubbs’ Homeowner- I axpayer Association led the anti-fluoride fight. The organization also gath- eied signatures on petitions forcing the upcoming spending cap t eferen- dum. Cisneros said a turnout of 100.000, which would tepresent more than 20 percent of the city’s voters, would be unusually high for a one-issue referendum. I he proposed amendment to the citv charter would tie spending to population and inflation. For example, if the city's popula tion increased 3 percent and the consumer price index increased 3 perc ent, the city’s budget could grow onlv 0 percent the follow ing vear. 1 he upcoming city budget for fis- cal 1987 is pegged at $606 million. ( itv staf f members say the proposed budget is well within (about $150 million) the proposed restrictions. 1 he- population is about 850,000. Staff members say capital im- piovements the city needs could lot c c- the budget to bump the cap by 10S9. Stubbs, who estimates the cap pi obablv has at least 90,000 support- cts. said Cisneros “is the leader of this community. I am a lowly tax- pavet living to get him to pay as muc h attention to the taxpayers as he has to people who take tax memev." In a related development, the leader of a San Antonio-based Cath olic organization criticized Arch- hishop Patrick Flores for opposing the spending limit. MJNICH, West Germany (AP) — terrorist bomb planted at the base jftloadside tree demolished an in- istrialist’s passing limousine ednesday, killing him and his auffeur and sending bursts of me 65 feet into the air. The car carrying Karl Heinz tekurts, 56, was blown 20 feet off e road near his home, crumpled tl riddled with holes. Police found remote-control cable leading into woods of the exclusive Strasslach rb. A message from the leftist Red Army Faction found nearby said it killed Beckurts, a board member of the giant Siemens electronics com pany, because Siemens was negotiat ing a role in the U.S. space defense program known as Star Wars. The force of the explosion smashed the windshield of a trailing car carrying a bodyguard, who was not injured and described the flames to police. Terrorists of the Red Army Fac tion, and its predecessor Baader- Meinhof gang, have been attacking West German industrialists and other corporate, government and NATO targets since the 1960s. The seven-page letter cited “se cret negotiations for Siemens” on a possible role in the research pro gram formally called the Strategic Defense Initiative. Beckurts was a nuclear physicist and head of the Siemens research and development division. Kurt Rebmann, the chief federal prosecutor, said the reference in the Red Army Faction message was to a preliminary meeting in June 1985 between West German corporate and government officials, about the controversial research program. He said Beckurts’ name was on a list of participating business exec utives police found in a January raid on a suspected Red Army hideout. Siemens spokesman Werner Osel said the company, based in Munich, has no formal contracts or proposals for participating in Star Wars. Photo by Tom Ownbey Bearing All — Eventually Mrs. Savage, played by Patience Reading, holds a teddy bear as Lynn Bond and Butch Farmer look on in the Premiere Players production of “The Curious Savage.” The show, part of a high school summer theater department sponsored by the Texas A&M theater department, compares the sanity of asylum inmates to the craziness of the outside world. Tickets for the show, which begins tonight, are $2 for students and $3 for non-students. ide Ws group ive tin- : Soviet Consensus for top tax rate limit emerging slower , 40.3) covlev's Washington (ap) — As con- ional tax writers prepare to 1 a final version of landmark overhaul legislation, a fragile sensus is emerging for reducing top individual rate to 27 percent, ssed by the Senate, while gener- ccepting higher business taxes proved by the House. White House chief of staff Donald Regan was the latest to add his ice to those suggesting such a package may emerge after House and Senate negotiators begin their work the middle of next week. President Reagan, meanwhile, will travel to Dothan, Ala., Thursday to resume the drumbeat for passage of the tax bill. The president’s chief of staff indi cated that Reagan “will say that he certainly likes the idea of a 27 per cent rate, yes.” Regan said the president also will tell his audience in the southeastern Alabama town “that tax reform is an idea w hose time seems to have come: It’s gone through quite a period of maturation; it’s bipartisan; it’s some thing that certainly every American wants — a fairer and a simpler sys tem.” Regan’s remarks were in a tran script the White House released Wednesday of an interview the chief in I was id that Economics of state reflected Texas bank’s earnings fall GB 111* 15 Vi 22 22'/: 22'/; Vi ■DALLAS (AP) — Texas banks’ second-quarter earnings will re flect the shaky energy and real es tate conditions in the state with weak earnings and hefty loan-loss provisions, analysts predicted, i RepublicBank, Texas’ largest bank-holding company, led off second-quarter reports Tuesday when it announced that its earn ings dropped 84 percent. 41* 7 8 i|Net income for the quarter ending June 30 was $5.7 million, or 13 cents per share, and the loan loss provision was strength ened by $78.5 million. |iThe bank holding company has 40 subsidiary banks and assets of $22.5 billion and was the first to report on the quarter ending June 30. First City Bancorporation of Texas, which made a $275 loan loss provision in the first quarter, showed net income of $15.1 mil lion or 36 cents per share, for the second quarter, officials said Wednesday. The company is reporting a net loss of $217.2 million for the first six months of the year be cause of the large reserves set aside, said spokesman John Jami son of Houston. He said the net income re ported for the second quarter in dicates First City w^as correct in increasing reserves. The com pany charged off $126.6 million in loans during the second quar ter. Reserves for loan losses stood at $269.8 million as of June 30. Most second-quarter reports from financial institutions will probably reflect a slight deterio ration from first-quarter results, said Georgia Head, an analyst with the Dallas firm of Rauche Pierce Refsnes Inc. Head said the plunging price of oil touched off troubles in Texas banks, and the real estate market has softened because of some overbuilding during the boom period. RepublicBank’s provision for loan losses of $78.5 million in the second quarter exceeded charge- offs of $53.8 million, thus in creasing the allowance from the first quarter by $24.7 million to $285.7 million, RepublicBank said in a statement. of staff had the day before with an invited group of reporters. Those comments reflected the growing public show from Congress and the White House of a will ingness to compromise to make sure the tax measure becomes law. During a speech in Boston on June 27, Rep Dan Rostenkowski, D- 111., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, exaggerated the easy path the tax bill faces. “From now on, it’s largely a matter of guiding it to the Rose Garden” for the president’s signature, he said. But in that same address, Rostenkowski suggested he might be willing to accept the lower individual tax rates of the Senate-passed bill if Senate bargainers would be willing to go along with the heftier cor porate taxes in the House-passed measure. The Senate bill compresses more Wife of cancer victim could face charges FORT WORTH (AP) — A Tar rant County grand jury may review the case of a cancer victim’s widow who says she removed a life-support tube from her husband’s throat to give him dignity in death, authorities said Wednesday. Police spokesman Doug Clarke said investigators plan to refer the case to the Tarrant County district attorney. Prosecutors would then decide whether to take the case to a grand jury. The widow, Barbara Clark, said she was surprised at a homicide rul ing returned in the death of her hus band, Joseph, who had suffered from cancer of the esophagus. “I don’t understand,” she said. “I don’t know why they’re doing this to me.” Clark told police she believed her husband was dead when she re moved the tube. On Tuesday, however, the Tar rant County medical examiner’s of fice ruled the death a homicide be cause an autopsy showed Clark died of asphyxiation caused by the re moval of a life-sustaining tube, spokesman Bill Fabian said. Clark said she visited her husband on July 4 with her mother-in-law. She said she took Clark’s hand as his mother left the room. Then he opened his eyes and his breathing stopped, she said. She said she pulled out a tube that was keeping his mouth open as a nurse walked into the room. “His lips were all bloody,” she said. “I said, ‘He doesn’t need this anymore, he’s dead.. . . I did not pull a tube out of my husband until he died. He wasn’t breathing, and the (heart monitor) was straight.” than a dozen existing individual tax brackets — ranging from 11 percent to 50 percent — into two brackets of 15 percent and 27 percent. ihe House bill has individual rates of 15 percent, 25 percent, 35 percent and 38 percent. Reagan’s original tax proposal carried a top individual rate of 35 percent. Reagan to campaign for Clements AUSTIN (AP) — Former Gov. Bill Clements will get some high- powered help in his bid to regain the state’s top office when Presi dent Reagan campaigns for him in Dallas later this month. Clements' campaign manager George Bayoud said Wednesday the president will make two ap pearances for Clements July 23. Clements, ousted after one term in 1982, in May won the COP nomination to challenge the man who beat him in the last elec tion, Democratic Cov. Mark White. “The president and the gover nor are close, personal friends and have been political allies for many years,” Bayoud said.