'W'1£‘2£?"D . » 1 nltn .-. The Battalion Vol. 82 No. 195 GSPS 045360 8 pages yss^l lay I t lo J College Station, Texas Friday, August 15, 1986 1 a r 4 n> . ■imJ Wall ift. I ?ar.:| ig akl Tropj heJ ie\ Gfj Eller: ‘Meat axe 1 cuts no budget solution University News Service B Texas A&M University System Board of Regents Chairman David Eller said Thursday that crippling cuts for higher education would cost ■exas infinitely more than they ■ould save. ■ A “meat axe” approach to solving the state’s short-term budget prob lems, Eller said, particularly at a ma- Br research university such as T exas Ai'eM, would cost too much in future Bits and economic benefits to be fea sible. Eller began the day by meeting with scores of Texas A&M alumni and supporters in Dallas/Fort Worth and concluded the day with a similar meeting in Houston. Between the two meetings he ap peared before the Senate Finance Committee in Austin to explain the ef fects of proposed funding cuts on System institutions and agencies. Cuts currently being considered for the System range up to $50 mil lion for next year and could result in the elimination of more than 1,800 positions throughout the state. Using standard economic multi pliers, the net effect from personnel reductions could be as high as 4,600 jobs throughout the state and a neg ative $400 million effect on the econ omy, Eller said. He also said funding cuts would seriously damage Texas A&M’s abil ity to be a major research university that can compete for top faculty and attract major research funding. Texas A&M’s $ 150 million annual research volume — the largest in the South or Southwest — each year ac counts for almost $500 million of the Texas economy, again applying the multiplier effect, university officials pointed out. “If we are really concerned about the economic health of Texas we should find ways to invest more in higher education rather than less,” Eller said. “I know firsthand what commer cially applicable research coming out of a university research laboratory can mean,” observed the Houston entrepreneur. Texas A&M President Frank Van diver pointed out that Texas A&M research in recent years has spun off at least five other firms that each have revenues of more than $2 mil lion annually. Dr. Perry Adkisson, System chan cellor, noted that each additional $1 million in research creates at least 10 new jobs within the system and has a multiplier effect of tripling that number. Those increases don’t in- ommittee okays ehnquist, Scalia or Supreme Court WASHINGTON (AP) — The IffltiBeiiate Judiciary Committee on By. ■hursday recommended that Wil- ofpcRam H. Rehnquist be confirmed as angdRhief justice and that Antonin Scalia Iniv|jake his place on the Supreme chram: hop L" ear a r of tli portct OStUi- obtame: 77 trait ,ourt. I The 13-5 vote recommending Rehnquist’s elevation came as Re- lublicans easily beat back an attempt |y liberal Democrats to portray him pis too extreme to lead the U.S. court lystem. I After the Rehnquist decision, the iommittee voted 18-0 to recommend approval of Scalia as one of the eight Kupreme Court associate justices. imaginf 'medki sports.' k recoil involve! inbad he JOll ough he vice (ae- rom the n't taken thranf. ,ta II GSU ordered to give refund of $15 million 2 2k; 5 29# 0 - 6 1 0 8 3 10 0 ffi 0 « AUS TIN (AP) — Refunds total ing $21.4 million to customers of two electric utilities have been approved by the Public Utility Commission, of ficials said Thursday. The refunds, including more than $1 million in interest, will show up as credits on bills beginning in Septem ber, said PUC spokesman Bo Byers. Gulf States Utilities, with Texas headquarters in Beaumont, was or- idered to refund $15.7 million, in- nduding nearly $730,000 interest on lover-recoveries of fuel costs from March through June. West Texas Utilities, in Abilene, jvill refund $5.7 million, including more than $300,000 interest for fuel : over-recoveries. West Texas Utilities also will lower lits quarterly fuel charges from Sep- Itember through November, the IPUC said. The company said that ■would reduce estimated fuel reve- Inues by $7.9 million over the three- Imonth period. Both nominations were sent to the full Senate, where Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., vowed the battle over Rehnquist will be renewed. At the White House, spokesman Larry Speakes said: “We are ex tremely pleased. We look forward to early, full Senate action.” The dispute over Rehnquist’s qualifications remained bitter and partisan to the end, as relentless at tacks were led by Kennedy and fel low Democrats Howard Metzen- baum of Ohio, Patrick Leahy of Vermont, Paul Simon of Illinois and Joseph Biden Jr. of Delaware. But the Rehnquist attackers sup- ported Scalia, the first Italian-Amer- ican to be nominated to the Supreme Court. “Scalia is a conservative,” Ken nedy said. “He is not an extremist.” Opponents of Rehnquist said he was insensitive to minorities and women, supported government re pression of civil liberties, harassed voters in Arizona, bought property that barred blacks and Jews, misled the committee numerous times, fa vored crumbling the wall between church and state and refused to dis qualify himself from a surveillance case in violation of judicial ethics. “The record . . . contains over whelming and shocking evidence . . . of lifelong hostility to claims for ra cial justice,” Kennedy said. “He’s wrong on equal rights for women; wrong in support of church and state; wrong on individual freedoms protected by the First Amendment. He is an extremist, too extreme to sit as chief justice.” Supporters of the 61-year-old Rehnquist struck back with equal vigor. Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., said Rehnquist “had everything but the kitchen sink thrown at him” yet still “came out of the hearings stronger than when he went in.” “For those who object,” added Laxalt, “there will be another elec tion.” Sax Appeal Ken Sury, a senior journalism major, practices his saxophone Thursday on a ledge outside a second Photo by Tom Ownbey floor window of the Reed McDonald Building as Sue Krenek, a junior journalism major, looks on. elude the possibility of creating new businesses and even whole new fields, he said. Eller and Adkisson agreed that Texas A&M research is on the threshold of having an even more dramatic impact on the Texas econ omy in areas ranging from biotech nology and robotics to food proc essing. The value-added effect alone for the food processing industry is expected to increase $12 billion by the year 2000. Exchange house raid nets 20 BROWNSVILLE (AP) — In a crackdown on possible money laun dering schemes on the Mexican bor der, federal authorities said Thurs day they arrested 20 people with money exchange houses for failing to report large transactions. Twenty-five exchange house op erators and five corporations were indicted on charges of failing to re port currency transactions exceed ing $10,000, said Christopher Milner, assistant U.S. attorney in Brownsville. Exchange houses, or “casas de cambio,” became a target for federal investigators because there are vir tually no state or federal laws regu lating them, said Michael Grubich, head of the criminal investigation di vision of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. Milner said large transactions could make it possible to exchange money linked to illicit activities. The investigation began a year ago when IRS employees went to about 100 exchange houses along the border and in San Antonio to tell the operators about federal report ing requirements. The IRS workers left Currency Transaction Reports that must be filled out on trans actions exceeding $10,000, Milner said. “A short period of time later, un dercover operatives went in to ex change currency amounts in excess of $10,000 (and said they) didn’t want the reports filed,” Milner said. “Those (operators) who said, ‘We won’t take your business without fil ing out a form,’ we smiled and said, ‘We’ll take our business somewhere else’ and obviously they weren’t in dicted,” he said. “But individuals who said, ‘No problem,’ Well, that’s a problem,” Milner said. Grubich said undercover IRS and U.S. Customs agents visited about 50 exchange houses and about half of them complied with the law. “This is one of the first steps in the investigation to make sure that the exchange houses have been edu cated as to the currency transaction reporting requirement,” Milner said. Easier suspensions provided :S ISES AY p.c. House OKs discipline bill AUSTIN (AP) — The Texas House on Thursday tentatively approved a school discipline mea sure that teachers say they need to get unruly students out of the classroom. The bill, which faces a final House vote before going to the Senate, won unanimous, prelimi nary approval in a voice vote. The action came shortly after Gov. Mark White expanded the call of the special session to include school discipline. Portions of the bill drew oppo sition Thursday from a legislator who said it would make it too easy to suspend students who commit minor infractions. Bill sponsor Bill Haley, D-Cen- ter, said the 1984 school reform act watered down the authority of teachers and administrators to deal with students who disrupted classes. Under the existing law, school officials must place unruly students in “alternative education programs” in school before sus pending or expelling them. In order to suspend or expel a student, a hearing must be held in which it is must be shown that the child is “incorrigible.” Under Haley’s bill, schools could suspend students without first trying an alternative pro gram. The State Board of Educa tion would set the procedural rules. Haley told the House that his bill would not destroy the alterna tive education programs- Business: Cut the budget fat Group seeks spending cuts, not tax hike AUSTIN (AP) — The state’s larg est business association Thursday backed Speaker Gib Lewis’ plan to battle the state budget crisis with spending cuts, not tax hikes. “Let’s get the fat out first,” Texas Association of Business Chairman George Baur of Houston told a news conference. Baur said his business group likes Lewis’ $632.2 million in budget cuts set for House floor debate Friday. “We think we would be in favor of fair and equitable taxation but ... af ter a good job trimming,” Baur said. The House Appropriations Com mittee voted to cut the price of per sonalized license plates, which rose from $25 to $75 a year in 1985. Rep. Bill Ceverha, R-Richardson, who won committee approval for his bill to reduce the fee to $40, said this could increase revenue to about $600,000 a year since more Texans would buy them. Part of Lewis’ plan drew opposi tion Thursday from Frank Raines, a New York investment banker who said Texas’ bond ratings could suf fer if money is withdrawn from the Permanent University and Perma nent School funds. Detention upheld by S. Africa court JOHANNESBURG, South Africa |(AP) — A provincial supreme court, ■ contradicting a previous Puling, on ■Thursday upheld the indefinite im- Iprisonment without charge of dissi- I dents. A black student boycott, launched ■ to protest the deployment of security ■ forces on school grounds, affected I dozens of schools in Soweto and ■ other Johannesburg-area black ■ townships. Violence, the most widespread since the state of emergency was im posed June 12, accompanied the walkout when it began Wednesday. Unrest continued sporadically Thursday as the protest spread from Soweto, according to township resi dents. The state of emergency prohibits news media from publishing the ac tivities of security forces, statements that might be considered subversive or the names of detained people. No precise number is available, but thousands of people have been detained without charge under the emergency decree. The detention decision by a three- judge panel of the Natal Province Supreme Court directly contra dicted a ruling Monday by another panel of the same court striking down key sections of the detention regulations. The second ruling takes prece dence in Natal because it is more re cent. Even so, lawmakers said, it does not nullify the release of Solomon Tsenoli, who was freed after Mon day’s ruling. “W r e fear the worst,” said Business Day, the country’s leading financial newspaper, in editorial comment on an electoral proposal put forth at Wednesday’s congress of the gov erning National Party. The party, which has held power since 1948, offered to call elections for blacks to choose members of an advisory council to discuss possible constitutional changes with the gov ernment. If held, such elections would be the first nationwide elec tions in which blacks were given the vote. Bolivia cocaine raids ‘dampen’ drug trade WASHINGTON (AP) — American-supported Bolivian raids on suspected cocaine facili ties are proving only modestly successful, but good enough to dampen the drug trade, an Army general said Thursday. Gen. John R. Galvin, the four- star Army general who heads the U.S. Southern Command in Pan ama, also said he is convinced that Cuba is playing a role in narcotics trafficking throughout the region despite its claims to the contrary. In another development, Vice President George Bush and At torney General Edwin Meese III announced a major anti-drug ini tiative aimed at stopping the flow of illegal drugs across the U.S.- Mexico border. The interdiction program will include hundreds of new federal agents and millions of dollars worth of sophisticated equipment to cover the 2,000-mile border. Meese said the massive “Oper ation Alliance,” to be phased in over two years, “will be the most widespread interdiction program on our land borders in law en forcement history.” But in an appearance at the National Press Club, Mexican President Miguel de la Madrid denied reports that he may per mit U.S. aircraft to cross the Mex ican border in pursuit of airborne drug traffickers.