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College Skaggs Center AGGIES HELPING AGGIES Along with a full range of services, including savings, checking, auto loans, personal loans and special services. The Texas Aggie Credit Union will make Guaranteed Stu dent loans to students attending Texas A&M University. We’re here to help you complete your valuable and necessary education. We are member owned and run and we are Aggies Helping Aggies. TEXAS AGGIE CREDIT UNION 301 Dominik Dr College Station 696-1440 NCUA 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-noon Sat. WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan will hold a prime-time news conference next Tuesday in Chicago, the White House said. Parched Southeast reports first drought-related layoffsWI In an unusual presidential news conference away from the White House, Reagan will select questions from members of the traveling White House press corps and from Chicago-area reporters, spokesman Larry Speakes said Tuesday. The news conference will be held at 8 p.m. EDT. Reagan’s news conference will come at the end of a day in which he will speak at the Illinois State Fair in Springfield and then travel to Chi cago to appear at fund-raising events on behalf of Republican Gov. Jim Thompson and Judy Koehler, the COP candidate for the Senate. Low water in the drought-seared Southeast is forcing a slowdown in papermill production, killing thou sands of pine tree seedlings and cut ting into the Tennessee Valley Au thority’s hydroelectric generation. A 71-car train with 1,440 tons of hay donated by Vermont farmers for cattle in dusty pastures arrived in Georgia on fuesday, with distribu tion planned on Wednesday, and a 94-car train of fodder from Wiscon sin and Minnesota arrived at Bir mingham, Ala. But in the drought region one en terprising Georgia town is selling hay irrigated with water from its waste treatment plant. Agricultural losses are estimated at $2.3 billion from the Mason- Dixon line to northern Florida. Heat-related deaths have mounted to 104. Champion International said Monday that 25 employees at its pa per mill in Canton, N.C., took un paid leaves or vacations and 4 1 were shifted to maintenance. Up to 100 or more could be laid off out of a work force of 1,983 once the maintenance work is finished, said plant Manager J. Oliver Blac k- well. The plant is reducing pulp pro duction by half and papermaking by 35 percent. Blackwell said Champion’s water shortage became critical when a lake on plant property droppedi®VUS'l II to use to supplement intakefijjjhite, gan Pigeon River, which is at hall, urc three mal flow. , A Hi, on W In South Carolina, Bowaitthture for the nation’s largest prodistHirease tc newsprint, is avoiding pi(.;.bi|ion bud cuts at its Catawba plantbyhHSome ; a 1.4 billion-gallon holding! fobs — am wastewater at a cost ofSTr/fitt day < fhe Wateree River is tool jion “I kn lute the waste to waterquafcwlen leal dards, said public relationsmjHHoweve Kdward Haws. Hential s oui spend fhe I VA, which operate many cot and dams for flood control Jtht v prefe tion and hvdroelectricity,ha:H’lt’s no lowed the drought to affeti lqlestion c tion on the Tennessee Rivei mi st do < Hxas — Taxes take $22 of every $100 earned | Htuld be ‘ H'fhe on percent, and the tax do take effec S 3 5.000 - S 3 9,999 house |atically « dropped from 22.2 percent: of the sta percent. > || Htcycle. 1 here were these otherckHTlie pla for households earning j; rate from 524,999, tax share fell fncRnt. The WASHINGTON (AP) — For ev ery $100 earned by an American family, the four largest taxes gobble up $21.90, according to a new gov ernment study. And while that’s only a dime more than a year earlier, the report on taxes and income for 1984, the last year for which such a detailed analy sis has been made, found the bite ris ing for those least able to pay, while upper-income Americans had fall ing tax rates. The Census Bureau study of af ter-tax income found that 92.4 per cent of all U.S. households paid at least one of the four major taxes — federal income, state income, Social Security and real estate. That was up from 92.1 percent who paid at least one of those taxes in 1983. And while most of those taxes are progressive — meaning they in crease according to rising income — Americans at the lowest end of the income scale found their tax burden rising while those earning more paid a smaller share, the study disclosed. For example, for those house holds earning under $10,000 that paid any taxes at all, the share was 9.8 percent of income in 1984, up from 9.3 percent a year earlier: Households in the $10,000 to $14,999 income bracket saw their tax burden rise from 1 1.5 percent to 11.6 percent over the year. Those earning $ 15,000 to S19,999 were un changed, paying 14.5 percent each year. From $20,000 on up, however, the tax burden declined. Households with incomes of $50,000 and over fared best in year- to-year terms, even though they also paid the most. That group paid 28.1 percent of income in taxes in 1984, down from 29 percent a year earlier. Households earning $30,000 to $34,999 also did well, with their tax share falling from 21 percent to 20.4 percent to 17.2 percent; LHu. sa 'J $2 wsHm. T LHi), Sc 29,999, from 19.2 percentlHamilton pet e ent; S40,000-SH999, HCalling 23.1 percent to 22.7 percen:| 545,000-$49,999, f rom 24.1 pi to 23.6 percent. fhe main culprit in theiiij seems to have been Social Sftl Not only is the tax rate higheil in past years, it is being apptl gi aduaIIv-increasing incomekJ Kie last el minatin ■ey were Waste (continued from page 1) commission showed traces of PCBs, benzene, toluene, lead and four types of phenol compounds in water samples taken from various spots at the school including the top of the landfill. Low levels of PCBs were found in each of three samples but in concen- trations well below the 50 parts per million the EPA allows. Investigators were unable to re move the cap of the monitoring well at the landfill and they were unable to find a port in the 25,000 gallon tank filled with contaminated soils dredged from the ponds in 1981. The investigators recommended that the EPA conduct further inves tigations of the site by specifically testing soil around the toxic waste landfill and testing soil and water at the drainage ponds and landfill. Brown said the EPA contracted another Dallas firm to perfom addi tional tests. Samples were made at the school in January and the results will be issued within a month. Brown says that the large demand for environmental testing, coupled with the limited number of firms ca pable of performing such tests, ac counts for the two- year gap between the vyater commission’s request for an EPA investigation and the issu ance of the EPA report. The hazardous chemicals buried in the landfill were contained in waste oils donated by various Gulf Coast refineries and chemical plants. Throughout the 1970s, donated waste oils were used to fuel training fires at the school. Department of Water Resources officials said in 1979 that the refine ries may have illegally donated the oils to avoid paying waste disposal fees. A&M now purchases commercial- grade fuels from regular distribu tors, Charles Page, head of the fire man’s school says. As a result of the investigation, the state required A&M in 1981 to dredge 9,000 cubic yards of contam inated soil from one of three drain age ponds and bury it in a landfill. A&M received special permission to build the landfill at the site be cause ground tests at the school de termined its clay base would prevent seepage. Water resources officials now say they’re not sure if the clay base is enough to prevent chemicals from leaking into the soil. The water commission recently named the fire school as one of 14 state Superfund clean-up sites. The school was also recognized in No vember 1985 as one of the ten worst polluters in the state. The state Superfund was initiated in 1985 and investigations into possi ble clean-up sites began in January 1986. A hearing will be held in Austin Aug. 28 to determine if the A&M site should be placed on the final Su perfund list. Radke said the school does not belong on the list and in tends to challenge the proposal at the hearing. But regardless of the results of the hearing, there may not be enough Superfund money to initiate clean up operations. In a letter dated July 9, 1986, the water commission informed the training school it may have to pay for cleaning up the landfill. The letter says, “Based on an in vestigation of the site, the TWC has information which indicates that (the training) school may be a re sponsible party. . . . Responsible par ties may be responsible for all mon ies expended by the state should the state take corrective action at the si te.” kvr»T i f^ I; Oil prices rise after OPEC cutbacks NEW YORK (AP) —Crude oil. gasoline and heating oil prices moved sharply higher on world markets Tuesday in reaction to OPEC’s endorsement of its pro duction cutback agreement. Trading was volatile, however, reflecting questions over how long the Organization of Petro leum Exporting Countries woiii be able to keep the proms I made in Geneva, analysts said Other analysts attriM swings in Tuesday’s marker profit-taking, but predicted J cartel’s action had stopped:: crash in oil prices. They saidc agreement would hold becaust| is in OPEC’s self-interest. Tisch named new Postmaster General WASHINGTON (AP) — Hotel magnate Preston Robert Tisch was selected on Tuesday as the next Postmaster General, sources said. Tisch was picked by the Postal Board of Governors. Sources as sociated with Congress, the postal board and a postal employees union identified Tisch to The.l| sociated Press, on the condiw they not he identified. Tisch, 60, is president oft Loews Corp. which, besides! tels, owns the Lorillard cigarci business, most of theGNAFin rial insurance company and! lova watchmakers. Near miss in shuttle launch revealed WASHINGTON (AP) — NASA came within 3 1 seconds of launching the shuttle Columbia last January without enough fuel to reach its intended orbit be cause of human error caused partly by overwork and fatigue, the Rogers Commission disclosed Tuesday. . The incident occurred on| 6, just 22 days before the: Challenger exploded 73 seconl after launch, killing its sevencif members. Th Scott proje< Columbia was successful launched on Jan. 12, after a J cord seven delays. arts n Oil issues raise Dow Jones slightly NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market closed higher Tuesday in active trading, buoyed by the strength of oil issues, but worries over a sagging bond market kept prices from surging ahead. The Dow Jones average-of 30 industrials, up 18.84 points at its midsession high, closed with a 7.03 gain at 1,777.00. Traders said oil issues stocks of banks thait have deb: cured by energy collateral the most after the Organizai of Petroleum Exporting Con I tries on Tuesday endorsedai" month plan to cut product thus lifting sagging oil prices. U.S., Soviets announce exchange agreement I BE AI (AP) — jfespioi |assifie< underco WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States and the Soviet Union on Tuesday announced the signing of 13 exchange agreements that offi cials said could restore cultural, health and educational contacts be tween the two nations to the levels of the 1970s. Under the agreements, worked out during a one-week visit by a So viet delegation, Soviet and American art exhibits will be exchanged, more students will study in each other’s countries, and joint research and programs will be undertaken. “This is just the beginning,” said Stephen H. Rhinesmith, coordinator 11 S. exchange initiative. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev agreed at. their summit meeting in Geneva last year to renew cultural exchanges, which had proliferated during the days of detente in the 1970s but had been cut drastically after the SoTviet invasion of Afghanistan in Decem ber 1979. Though the United States has continuously condemned the inva sion and supported rebels fighting the Soviet-backed government in Af ghanistan, Reagan said in proposing the renewal of the exchanges last year that they would help “promote openness, honest communications and opportunities for the two peo ples to get to know each other di rectly.” Rhinesmith told a news i ence that in addition to ilj agreements signed during tb(| week, both sides identified 1 tional areas for continued opment. He said he envisioned anM the number of performing exchanges compared to the II roughly the same level ofeduj nal exchanges and perhaps nf'J tiatives not undertaken in tb 2 | riod. Reagan agrees to release Rehnquist memo: WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan administration agreed late Tuesday to show the Senate Judi ciary Committee memos dealing with William H. Rehnquist’s role in controversial Nixon administration policies from 1969 to 1971. Senate Democrats said the agreement would head off a consti tutional confrontation that threat ened to delay action on President Reagan's nomination of Supreme Court Justice Rehnquist to be chief justice. “We are getting access to all we asked for,” said Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. The eight Democrats on the 18- member panel were joined by two Republicans in requesting the docu ments. The memoranda were written by Rehnquist when he was chief legal adviser to then-Attorney General John Mitchell under President Rich ard Nixon. They involve domestic wiretapping and the administra tion’s plans for dealing with Vietnam war protesters. fhe White House and Justice De partment balked last week at provid ing the memos. But Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., a Judiciary Committee member and a close friend of Reagan, helped work out the compromise. be “a limite 1 * W ' 1 i Comma believe Used to ; He w a copy foster t fUg anoi fe Milit; that Ot paid up s py, ant Viet Uni Laxalt said the administration “wanted to cooperate” and it was only a matter of agreeing on which documents would be provided. He said it lease.” But Democrats said theyaro l ied they will he able to exani^l relevant documents. Sen. Edward M. Kenned' Mass., said he was happy thattlf ministration no longer is “ston* 1 fing.” I he Judiciary Commit^ scheduled to vote Aug. 14 an( full Senate on Sept. Son thej Bp F° 11 nations of Rehnquist to be chid I ructlc tice. I- In so yor, Lt. said hi; L-