KBffiGflEQSaKtm rite es It Texas A&M m m -m • The Battalion u, )'i Cy yM 'd hisl lay alifP n slnl |Vol. 82 No. 191 GSPS 045360 8 pages ith a' i 1 » ii i a .i ii ii mi SHouse to A reconB ■ svote on V/unmL Deaver robe College Station, Texas F riday, August 8, 1986 bat ltd heir oia ie taltl lingsurl iiountt; 2-1 tJ aati Rk] lease tk owner l| r A1 ^ and tons pitcher h\ : i Kellv Dm respeas Garltor. | inghn'rj inftueK jsenai!8| mm ev hope:] the Nad n, buta n fintpiJ d in his lit 1, “A cod m miglM ) ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — A House panel will vote next week on whether to recommend that an inde pendent counsel investigate charges nat former White House deputy ■hief of staff Michael K. Deaver ■ommitted perjury, the subcommit- ■ee’s chairman said Thursday. I The panel will consider a report Biat alleges “possible perjury before we committee” when Deaver testi- Ked last May during a closed session, ■aid Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., Khairman of the House Energy and Kommerce oversight and investiga tions subcommittee. The subcommittee will meet ■Tuesday to consider approving the weport, which asks the independent >unsel to “inquire into whether or ot indictments for criminal misbe- avior should be acted upon by spe- al prosecutor.” Dingell said he will ask the sub- ammittee to approve the report. Randall Turk, a Washington at- arney representing Deaver, said it’s inappropriate to comment until such time as we have an opportunity to see any report prepared by Mr. DingelTs subcommittee.” The report deals with “several items of serious conflict in Mr. Deav- er’s testimony before the committee under oath,” said Dingell, who also chairs the full Energy and Com merce Committee. It also recom mends that an independent counsel act on findings by the General Ac counting Office that Deaver may have violated conflict-of-interest laws. Dingell declined to specify what elements of Deaver’s testimony were in conflict, saying he would prefer to wait until the report is considered by the subcommittee before he says | more. However, NBC Nightly News quoted sources as saying that Deav- See Deaver, page 8 Two Teaching Jobs Dr. Cleve Want, a Texas A&M associate professor of English, is the interim pastor at Friends United Church of Christ. Want became involved with the Photo by Wes George church in April when a local minister recom mended him for the interim position, and will con tinue as pastor until December. Missing agent of CIA defects to Soviet Union GARLAND (AP) — The parents of former CIA agent Edward How ard said they learned he had de fected to the Soviet Union when he called them Tuesday morning from Moscow. “He said more or less he’s going to settle down and wants his family to come see him,” Ken Howard told the Garland Daily News in a telephone interview Thursday. “I’m relieved to know where he’s at and that he’s OK,” Howard said, declining to reveal specific details of his conversation with his son. Edward Howard, 33, vanished from his Santa Fe, N.M., home last September, just days before the FBI charged him with espionage. The Soviet Union said Thursday it had given him asylum. It was believed to be the first de fection by a CIA agent and the first American defection to Moscow since the 1960s. Just before disappearing, Howard quit a job with the New Mexico state legislature’s finance committee. FBI agents said his wife, Mary, aided his moonlit escape by placing a dummy in a car to make it appear he was there. Mrs. Howard later left Santa Fe and her whereabouts were un known. But Ken Howard told the Daily News that his daughter-in-law and her S'/s-year-old son moved to Minnesota to live with her parents. The Howards, who live in the Dal las suburb of Garland, did not im mediately return messages left on their telephone answering machine Thursday by The Associated Press. However, Howard told the Daily News that his son said he was granted political asylum and that he will be looking for a place to live somewhere other than Moscow. He said he would write when he finds a home, Ken Howard said. Howard said he probably won’t visit his son until he retires in about third-* short *1* at JOin I didn't* 1 ird set; tches, FlacrT [arty Dam evin Cm ’hristo in [ olmes if no House committee approves income tax ban lament 1 * lie don 1111 > light ?• . lampi 0 "' ce a : tojoijL zen and% o golfs 111 up! ‘ AUSTIN (AP) — The House Ways and Means Committee, at a hastily convened session Thursday, approved a proposed constitutional amendment that would ban a state personal income tax. Committee members voted 7-5 against proposing a ban on a cor porate income tax. Chairman Stan Schlueter, D-Kill- een, said “corporate executives” have told him they prefer a cor porate income tax to taxes aimed at specific industries. “They feel, at least, it’s reflective of what their company is doing and reflective of the economy,” Schlueter said of the corporate in come tax. 3,450-pound shark landed in New York White to broaden focus of special session AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Mark White said Thursday he may al low lawmakers at the special legis lative session to consider a bill to permit out-of-state banks to pur chase Texas institutions. “A strong banking community is very important to a strong economy,” White said at a news conference. In Texas, a special legislative session can consider only those subjects a governor allows. So far. White has opened the session that convened Wednesday only to spending cuts, but he has indi cated other topics will be included as the 30-day session progresses. The governor said he had talked with officials of indepen dent banks and Texas bank hold ing companies. “Their consensus is that some form of interstate banking should pass in order to strengthen their institutions and provide more capital for investing in Texas,” White said. The measure now goes to the full House for consideration. In his Wednesday speech to a joint House-Senate session, Gov. Mark White announced his support for the constitutional amendment. “I expect we should have a cor porate tax prohibition as well as per sonal,” he said at a Thursday news conference. White added that the lack of a state income tax “is a very attractive way to get companies to move to your state.” If approved by the Legislature, the proposed constitutional amend ment would go on the November general election ballot. Schlueter said the measure — in some form — would win House sup port, but now has a “less than even” chance of winning Senate approval. Opponents of the proposal say it unnecessarily precludes a source of income the state might need in the future. Only a handful of lawmakers are saying an income tax should be con sidered as a way to get the state out of the current budget crisis. The Ways and Means Committee voted 11-1 for the amendment that would ban a personal income tax. Rep. Dan Morales, D-San Antonio, voted against it. six years, out of fear of jeopardizing his own job at Texas Instruments in Dallas, where he is an electronics technician. Edward Howard, who had been in training for a Moscow post, worked for the CIA from January 1981 to June 1983, when he was fired. U.S. officials said he flunked a polygraph test that indicated he had used illegal drugs while he was an agent and was guilty of petty thefts of money. Lewis says stock buy ‘an error* AUSTIN (AP) — House Speaker Gib Lewis will repay $25,000 to his political campaign fund that he says was mistakenly used to buy stock for his company’s employee retirement system in 1982. Lewis blamed the error Wednes day on a Lake Worth National Bank of Fort Worth employee, who he said mistakenly debited Lewis’ speaker campaign account for the stock purchase. “It was just one of those dumb things,” Lewis told The Dallas Morn ing News. Tom Stewart, president of the Lake Worth bank, said Thursday he “couldn’t rule out the fact that it was an error” but added that Lewis “has always had impeccable dealings with us.” Copies of portions of Lewis’ bank statement were sent anonymously to reporters earlier this week, along with a funds-transfer slip showing that $25,000 had been taken from the “Gib Lewis Speaker’s Campaign Fund” and applied to a loan speci fied only by number. Lewis said Wednesday, however, that the money actually went to buy the stock and should have been charged instead to the account main tained by his company, Lewis Label Products Inc. Lewis, who is a director of the Lake Worth bank, said he had three accounts at the bank at the time, and “obviously the funds were trans ferred from the wrong account.” “As far as this transaction is con cerned, those funds will be restored to the campaign account from the account originally intended, that of Lewis Label Products Inc.,” Lewis said. It was not illegal to divert cam paign funds to personal use in 1982, although the Legislature changed the law in 1983 to make it so. ;UE Pet .673 .515 .476 442 .556 .519 .505 .481 .462 .462 irries MONTAUK, N.Y. (AP) — Fisher men reeled in a 3,450-pound great white shark, with help from the leg endary shark hunter whose exploits inspired parts of the movie “Jaws.” Hundreds of spectators gathered Thursday at a dock on the eastern tip of Long Island to see the 16-foot, 8-inch creature. “We crushed the record,” said Donnie Braddick, 30, of Hunting- ton, who completed the capture at about 8 p.m. Wednesday with help from shark fisherman Frank Mun- dus and four others. The shark, caught on a 150- pound test tackle normally used to catch giant tuna, was said to be 800 pounds heavier than the previous record for a great white shark that was caught, as listed in the Guinness Book of Records. The fishermen were in the Atlan tic 30 miles south of Montauk when they spotted as many as eight great white sharks feeding on a dead whale ori Monday. Basin spokesman Richard Berk said the fish might not qualify be cause of the weight of the line used to catch it and the number of fisher men involved in the catch. “One guy has to do it with no as sistance,” he said. Geren stresses trade in debate with Barton By Olivier Uyttebrouck Staff Writef Congressional candidate Pete Ceren stressed foreign trade is sues in a debate Thursday with Congressman Joe Barton, who emphasized his conservative vot ing record and an oil import fee he’s sponsoring in the House. The debate was held at the First Baptist Church gymnasium in Magnolia, a small town about 60 miles southeast of College Sta tion. The atmosphere was remi niscent of a small-town fish fry. The debate was unusual in that Barton was not present. He ad dressed the audience from a pay phone near the souvenir shop at the U.S. Capitol building, he said. Barton explained that a De partment of Defense appropria tions bill today required that he be in Washington. Barton was called away to vote twice during the debate. Tuesday’s debate was the first of several the candidates intend to hold in various towns through out the 6th Congressional Dis trict. Barton’s oil import fee would place an $8 fee on oil imported at the current price of $14 per bar rel. The fee would become pro gressively smaller as oil prices rise, and would be eliminated when oil prices climbed over $22 per barrel. Barton also said that he and 33 other House Republicans intro duced a bill that would repeal the Windfall Profits Tax. The bill is the House counterpart of legis lation passed in the Senate Tues day night. Barton said. The Windfall Profits Tax was imposed on oil producers during the Carter administration when oil prices were rising sharply, but since the collapse of oil prices ear lier this year the tax has not gen erated income. Ceren says he supports the oil import fee, which is supported by all Texas House members and one Texas Senator. Ceren said that the $168 billion trade deficit has cost Texas 170,000 jobs and accused the Reagan administration and Bar ton of not effectively addressing trade issues. He said Barton didn’t join other Texas congressmen in an unsuccessful attempt Wednesday to override Reagan’s veto of a tex tile trade bill Congress passed earlier this month. Geren said that farmers and small businessmen are not given enough attention by either Bar ton or the Reagan administration. Drug tests for Reagan, Bush to 'lead the way’ for nation WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan and Vice President George Bush will take drug tests next Monday “to lead the way” to ward achieving a drug-free Ameri can workplace, the White House said Thursday. Spokesman Albert Brashear said the 78 members of Reagan’s senior staff also have been asked to give urine samples Monday if they are not on vacation, but he stressed that the tests were voluntary. “We’re not out to punish anyone,” he said. “The president has made it clear that he is seeking a drug-free work place for all Americans,” the spokes man said. “He believes that all fed eral employees deserve a drug-free environment, and that federal em ployees should set the example for state and local government and the private sector to follow in identifying users of illegal drugs.” The announcement sparked a flurry of questions about how volun tary the tests would be, what would happen to senior stafif members re fusing to take it and whether the re sults would be made public. The White House staffers were notified up to five days in advance about the tests, thus raising ques tions about the effectiveness of the screening. Most drugs would disappear from the body after one to four days, so with mandatory tests, no advance notice is given. Brashear said “this is a voluntary program.” Asked whether it might become mandatory, he said, “We’re not at that point yet.” “The president has made it clear that he is seeking a drug-free workplace for all Americans. He believes that all federal employees deserve a drug-free envi ronment, and that federal employees should set the example...” — Spokesman Albert Bra shear. Reporters also asked Brashear several times to spell out the conse quences for any members of the se nior staff who did not volunteer to take the test, but Brashear did not elaborate. “If they don’t take it, they just choose not to take it,” he said at one point. But he also said “I’m sure that it (the refusal to submit) would be noted . . .probably by their supervi sor.” He said he did not know how many of the senior staff members would submit to the test, which screens for use of marijuana, co caine, heroin, PCP and certain forms of amphetamines and barbiturates. Brashear refused to say whether the White House would reveal how many of the officials refused to take the test, and said no test results would be made public. Kenneth T. Blaylock, president of the American Federation of Govern ment Employees, the largest federal workers’ union, scoffed at the idea. In a telephone interview from Las Vegas, Nev., where the union was preparing for a convention opening Monday, he said, “I don’t think peo ple are going to run out and take a drug test just because the president is taking one.” Blaylock, whose union represents some 700,000 federal employees, also said, “You can bet they (the White House) wouldn’t have pub licly announced it (the drug testing program), if they had not known their people would, in fact, partici pate.”