la i rails $5 C Barbers!# 'er Lever Ms 16-062 |ol. 82 No. 210 GSPS 045360 10 pages TKeBattalion College Station, Texas Wednesday, September 17, 1986 Shoe Shines urs: $22“ Appt. necessan Hotel, NISSA 5counl abor on Nil offer 10°/o II non-Niss presented n up. r service cus 775*18 Lewis agrees tax increase is necessary S0CIE1 ig udder ny Stubt Three demonstrators shield their candles from the wind during a celebration of the United Nations International Day of Peace. About Photo by Tom Ownbey 35 people turned out at Rudder Tower Tuesday night for the dem onstration, which was sponsored by the Texas A&M Baha’i Club. Baha'i Club holds candlelight gathering Vigil commemorates Peace Day i Call 60-6295 1 Roses 3w-Pink dozen ifore Friday By Lisa Maduro Reporter E About 35 people formed a human jichain around Rudder Fountain Tuesday night, culminating a cand lelight vigil conducted by the Texas A&M Baha’i Club in observance of the United Nations International J D. / )f Peace. ■ Roozbeh Taeed, a junior biology Imajor and member of the Baha’i Bub, said the event was intended to | bring attention to the U.N.’s declara- rtions of 1986 as the International i Year of Peace and Sept. 16 as the In- iternational Day of Peace. ■ Taeed added that the group pvanted to draw attention to the idea if that without world peace, civilization | cannot endure. The event is conducted annually Iby the Baha’i Club. It included the reading of religious and secular pas sages, and the playing of both taped and live music supporting the peace movement. Three participants read quota tions from a variety of sources, in cluding Martin Luther King Jr., Ma hatma Gandhi, Erasmus, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Albert Einstein, Victor Hugo and Pope Paul VI. Corrie Bergeson, a graduate stu dent in educational technology, and David Rhodes, a musician originally from Houston, provided the live music. Bergeson said he wanted to par ticipate in the vigil because he is a strong believer in world peace. A similar event held last year at the Memorial Student Center was co-sponsored by the League of Women Voters and the Brazos Val ley Peace Action. Some members of the latter group also were present Tuesday night. Nan El Sayet, a member of Brazos Valley Peace Action, said the Baha’i Club wanted to organize the event this year by itself. The United Nations International Day of Peace and Year of Peace were established to increase world aware ness of the need for peace. The governing body for the Ba ha’i faith, called Universal House of Justice, is headquartered in Haifa, Israel. Last year it issued a peace statement to 200 heads of state, in cluding President Reagan and U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar. The A&M Baha’i Club consists of seven student and faculty members. Saman Ahmadi, a junior electrical p from 2:001 of Sbissa engineering major, is the chairman of the club. Saman attended the Baha’i Inter national Peace Conference held in San Francisco in August. Ahmadi, who was born in Iran but moved to the United States eight years ago, said that the intention of the vigil was to promote the teachings of the Baha’i faith and to discuss peace-re lated issues. Mary Greenblatt, a member of the Baha’i governing assembly, said there are about 40 Baha’i followers in the College Station area. The governing body of the Baha’i faith, the National Spiritual Assem bly of Baha’i, is elected annually by representatives of each area with a Baha’i community. AUSTIN (AP) — House Speaker Gib Lewis, the longtime key oppo nent to a tax bill, conceded Tuesday that it will take a tax increase during the current special session to keep the state from writing hot checks. Lewis, D-Fort Worth, said he would push for a temporary increase in the sales tax. He predicted a tax bill would win House approval, al though opponents say they have the votes to kill it. “It’s not a question of whether we will have one,” Lewis said. “I think it’s a question of how much.” The House Ways and Means Committee will begin hearings on taxes today. Chairman Stan Schlueter has said the committee would consider tax “concepts,” not specific bills. “I still say the vote in Ways and Means is still 10-3 (against a tax bill),” Schlueter, D-Killeen, said. “The speaker is going to have to be very persuasive . . .” he said. “I think it’s going to be an uphill battle.” Schlueter said if a tax bill proves necessary, he would favor removing exemptions to the sales tax, rather than increasing the rate. Lewis said the amount of increase depends on the spending cuts being negotiated by a House-Senate con ference committee. Gov. Mark White wants the state sales tax raised from the current 4 1 /s percent to 5'A percent, with the increase expiring next September. The Senate has been ready to ap prove a tax hike for several weeks, but Lewis has pushed a plan he said could solve the state cash-flow prob lem without higher taxes. But the speaker acknowledged Tuesday that not enough of his plan will win legislative approval to avoid a tax hike. “I think at this point you’ll see us fall short,” Lewis said. Despite strong opposition now in place, the House will approve a tax hike, Lewis predicted. “I don’t think anyone on this House floor wants to see Texas write a hot check,” he said. “We’re not going to do that. We will pass some budget enhancement proposals that we feel will get us through the cur rent biennium and prohibit any checks to be written that will not be good.” Comptroller Bob Bullock, who has projected a $2.8 billion state def icit, said Tuesday that he is prepar ing steps to avoid hot checks that could be issued if lawmakers don’t resolve the budget crunch. oMPMii shjjtes urge U.S. to increase effort to free hostages )otbalI games & / ODAYf l/ERY TUEStf TT THEATRE ANY FILM . LOCATIONS If 7:00 9:40 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Is- amic Jihad urged the United tales Tuesday to negotiate for he release of three American ostages in Lebanon as it did with he Soviet Union for American ewsman Nicholas Daniloff. The Shiite Moslem group also See related story, page 10 released a letter bearing the name of hostage David Jacobsen, which made a similar plea and warned that the kidnappers might kill their captives. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said in Washington that idministration officials believe acobsen apparently wrote the etter but “there is good reason to juestion whether it was freely vritten and represents anything Bore than the views of Mr. jacob- en’s captors.” The three-page letter was writ er! in poor and often stilted En- [lish, raising doubts that its origi- lal author was the 55-year-old acobsen, who was the adminis- rator of the American University ospital when he was kidnapped st year. Misspellings in the letter in cluded the name of the Rev. Law- jrence Martin Jenco, a hostage ho was freed in July after being field with Jacobsen and the oth- J acobsen is one of six Ameri cans now missing in Lebanon. Is lamic Jihad says it holds three American hostages and killed a fourth. It is uncertain who car ried out the kidnappings last week of two other Americans. Islamic Jihad’s latest commu nique and the handwritten letter were in a packet left outside a Western news agency in Moslem west Beirut. The packet also con tained a Polaroid photograph of Jacobsen in pajamas, almost iden tical to one of him released with an Islamic Jihad statement in Bei rut last week. “Why was Reagan interested minute by minute with spy jour nalist Daneloff but he is not inter ested one minute in our story?” asked the letter said to have been handwritten by Jacobsen. Dani- loffs name was misspelled. In a separate, typewritten, Ar- abic-language statement, Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, said the Reagan administration had made “concessions in the Daniloff case which provoked many ques tion marks in the hostages’ minds.” The three captives were “com paring what the (U.S.) govern ment did in the ‘Daniloff case with what it is doing for them,” the statement said. Judge rejects proposal to transfer 300 inmates TYLER (AP) — A federal judge Tuesday rejected a move by state prison officials to transfer 300 low- risk inmates to a National Guard ar mory at Mineral Wells in order to avoid early paroles. Following a two-day hearing, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Jus tice extended for 10 days a tempo rary order barring the Texas De partment of Corrections from transferring the inmates to Fort Wolters. After Justice issued his decision, TDC Director Lane McCotter said prison officials had no other choice than to pursue the transfer and that their chief concern was public safety. “The options we came up with we thought were outstanding options,” McCotter said. “Fort Wolters houses soldiers in Texas every weekend, 400 as a matter of fact. The facilities are very adequate. It’s amazing to me that they are not adequate for prisoners, but they are plenty ad equate for our soldiers.” Last week, Gov. Mark White an nounced the transfer in order to keep the prison population within 95 percent of capacity.. According to the Prison Management Act of 1983, prisoners must be released when the Texas prison system reaches 95 per cent capacity — 38,825 inmates. On Tuesday, the Texas prison population stood at 38,259 inmates, putting the system at 93.6 percent of capacity, counting beds at Fort Wolt ers and a Galveston prison hospital and some planned beds at TDC’s Wynne Unit. “I think the judge is send ing a message ... they are going to have to provide for permanent housing for all these prisoners. ” — Attorney General Jim Mattox. The latest figure represents the first time the TDC system has been below 94 percent capacity since April 8, said prison spokesman Charles Brown. Carl Jeffries, TDC assistant direc tor of classification, said Tuesday that if the law had been imple mented Monday, 244 inmates would have been released. Officials said Attorney General Jim Mattox will have to decide whether early releases will be nec essary following Justice’s order. “We are hopeful we can avoid triggering early release,” Mattox said. “He’s not letting us take the easiest road to resolving this partic ular problem. There are ways to re solve it other than letting these peo ple out early. “I think the judge is sending a message to the Legislature they are going to have to provide for perma nent housing for all these prison ers.” William Bennett Turner, an attor ney for the inmates, had contended Fort Wolters is unsuitable for use as a prison because prisoners would be denied educational and vocational opportunities mandated by the prison reform order, which was is sued by justice in 1981. Turner challenged state officials’ contentions that the crowding prob lem constitutes an emergency. “The only emergency is a political emergency relating to Mark White’s campaign,” Turner said. “There’s no evidence that anybody will be hurt by those releases.” Justice’s decision also was greeted warmly by a representative of Min eral Wells. L.J. Barnell, an attorney for the Wolters Industry Associa tion, said area residents were gener ally opposed to the idea of using the armory for a prison. “That is a chance that may have to come, but the Legislature created that, not the people of Mineral Wells,” Barnell said. “And if they were going to be dangers, I don’t want them transported to Mineral Wells.” McCotter also said Tuesday that an electronics plant located about a mile from the camp had expressed concern about security, especially for women employees who leave work at midnight. Prison officials had agreed to send a roving guard at the end of the firm’s evening shift for additional se curity, McCotter said. Fort Wolters, about 50 miles west of Fort Worth, was a training site for U.S. Army helicopter crews during the Vietnam War. “I’m not talking about ‘no pay,’ but I am talking about ‘slow pay’ to make sure the state has enough money to pay its bills,” Bullock said. The “slow-pay policy” could delay city and MTA tax rebates, payments to state retirement funds and local school districts, he said. A&M may lose 4.6% of funding Agreement near on state cuts AUSTIN (AP) — House and Senate negotiators said Tuesday after a surprisingly amicable ses sion they were near agreement on 1987 spending cuts of “some thing over” $505 million that would include a 9 percent cut in higher education funding. “I think we are almost there,” said Sen. Grant Jones, D-Temple, chief Senate negotiator on the 10 member conference committee. Rep. James Rudd, D-Brown- field, House chairman, said the 9 percent average cut in higher ed ucation would mean only a 3.6 percent reduction in total operat ing funds for the University of Texas at Austin and 4.2 percent overall for Texas A&M. Both schools have additional sources of income besides the state’s general revenue spending. Rudd agreed that House and Senate differences over 1987 spending were the only major roadblock remaining. He estimated it would take about two more days of dis cussion on the higher education cuts. Rudd said that House and Sen ate differences over 1987 spend ing were the only major roadb lock remaining. Both Jones and Rudd agreed that $505 million in cuts from 1987 appropriations was the “middleground” for a possible compromise. Originally the House made $739 million in cuts and the Sen ate $413 million. The House conferees made a compromise proposal Tuesday morning that Rudd said was 9 percent lower than the money originally appropriated for state colleges and universities. Originally the House proposed 1987 budget cuts of 13 percent for higher education. The Senate made 2.5 percent cuts in higher education funds. Jones said, “We are looking at that (the House compromise of fer) and at the next meeting will probably make our proposal, something more than $505 mil lion.” Commenting bn the new House offer, Rudd said,‘These cuts average 4 percent (down) from our original positions and we think this is a fair and reasona ble cut to take over the bien nium.” Overall spending reductions for other schools would be simi lar. The House compromise offer would make a $123 million re duction in general revenue funds in 1987 appropriations for gen eral academic purposes, com pared to $168.3 million in the original House bill and $J03.8 in the Senate bill. A special $15 million fund would be set up to cover expected shortages resulting from in creased tuition rates. University of Texas System medical schools would be re duced $88.3 million. The Senate wanted a $33.7 million reduction. The House offer also would make a $35.7 million or 8 percent reduction in funds for public ju nior colleges, compared to the Senate’s 6 percent or $26.8 mil lion. The House offer was the first time the 10-member conference committee has discussed their dif ferences on higher education since this special session began Sept. 8.