•*5!*, Danny My e * Sports Wril# *9gltsby2t — Rozorbodabti Bears by 1 The Battalion /ol. 82 No. 213 USPS 043360 10 pages College Station, Texas Monday, September 22, 1986 Sun Devils bfi Fighting irlstiU Oilers by t Cowboys bf l 6-4 6-4 (.66/1 ims n trade ut* and was raitdbJ narterbackavailailri 5-pounder "asjniii ti rectors as the id eplace Hill, wh u*s in the pasts Coming Through Photo by Dean Saito led on a coup, Si-lex,i S A&M's Matt (»mlev (:i8) gets wrapped up by North Texas attorney-agen State s Mike Rhone (18) alter gaining nine yards on this run during !•'( . West) divistori |; ; ie savs he I'.llieT 1 ' the Aggies’ 48-28 home-opening victory over the Eagles on Saturday. Gurley had 35 yards on 13 carries and scored one touchdown. Dcmiloff case could affect summit plans Shultz calls meeting 'unlikely' unless Soviets free journalist WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre tary of State George Shultz contin ued Sunday to press the Soviet Union to let American journalist Nicholas Daniloffleave Moscow, say ing a superpower summit was “most unlikely” until the case is resolved. Meanwhile, members of Congress supported the Reagan administra tion’s position to hold a firm line with the Soviets until Daniloff is freed. “I think it is most unlikely that you could have a fruitful meeting in the conditions that we have today,” Shultz said on ABC’s “This Week With David Brinkley,” reiterating re marks he made Saturday evening af ter he concluded two days of talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze. “It seems to me that what we must do is get this case settled before really you have an atmosphere that you can make some progress on the things people want to talk about,” Shultz said during the broadcast. is’ General Manat interesting," Dew to be fair. Therei u*s. He surely ■ to give the Raw 11 lie Tiers.” texas leaders fight for research funding ■USTIN (AP) — When Texas leaders de cided they wanted the state to have a reputa tion as a natiomil center for research and high technology, legislators treated the notion more as a measure of pride than need. So when Hi “high-technology” hills pro- mked by Gov. Mark White went to lawmak- |s in 1985, the Legislature passed only one requiting new money. • But supporters argue now the status of the technology bills has changed. hi the wake of the oil-price drop that has left the Legislature battling a projected $2.8 billion deficit, business and university leaders throughout Texas are arguing that the state hmst invest in diversifying its economy. I Pike Powers, formerly a slate representa tive and now an attorney with Fulbright 8c Jaworski in Austin, said,“Business as usual is out of business; it is imperative that the state develop the technologies needed to make it competitive.” During the next two months, two key state groups — the Select Committee on Higher Education and the governor’s Texas Science and Technology Council — will map strategy for how the Legislature should support re search and technology during the regular ses sion in January. A draft report of the governor’s Science and Technology Council says, “Advanced technologies combined with the traditional entrepreneurial abilities of Texans will form the base for a new Texas economy.” The council proposes three five-year plans for raising the state to national prominence in science and technology. But policy leaders admit today that Texas has done little compared to other states such as North Carolina and Pennsylvania, which spent more than a decade developing their re search and technology to boost their econ omies. Jurgen Schmandt, a political scientist at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, said “In every single respect you can think of, we’re coming from behind.” Gerhard Fonken, vice president of UT, said “We’ve not only had to fight tooth and nail with Harvard and MIT, we’ve had to fight with our own Legislature, which still views research with suspicion.” Last week, a task force of the select commit tee presented recommendations to ask the Legislature to spend $80 million more on re search during 1988 and 1989, bringing the to tal state research spending to nearly $300 mil lion over the two-year period. The 28-member Texas Science and Tech nology Council debated its draft report, which will recommend similar increases, on Thursday. The plan seeks increases of at least $15 million in research and a $5 million plan for a new state organization to coordinate en trepreneurial activities. Some gains are being made. Earlier this month, UT-Dallas received a $10 million grant from the Department of Defense to support research on a gamma-ray laser. At separate news conferences af ter their meetings ended Saturday, Shultz and Shevardnadze reported they had made some progress in preparing for a second meeting be tween Reagan and Gorbachev. But Shultz said the' Soviet spy charges against Daniloff were a stumbling block and Shevardnadze cited the American expulsion of 25 persons from the Soviet U.N. mis sion as an obstacle. Soviet Foreign Ministry spokes man Gennadi Gerasimov, appearing Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” said resolution of the Daniloff case is “not a very big problem at all.” “Mr. Daniloff is under investiga tion, he is charged and usually he’s going to be put to trial, but because we don’t want this particular case to be an obstacle in our relations, we can find some kind of solution and let him free,” he said. Gerasimov said “there are several ideas in air” to resolve the Daniloff case. “They were discussed and they can continue to be discussed,” he said, but he declined to disclose spe cifics of the ideas. Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., also ap pearing on the CBS program, said that while he agrees on the need for a summit meeting, the United States must set preconditions “lest we walk in and simply talk and build up hopes and have those hopes dashed in front of the world where the Sovi ets can take advantage of that propa ganda forum that we give them.” Daniloff, the Moscow correspon dent for U.S. News & World Report, was arrested Aug. 30 by the KGB on suspicion of spying. He was released Sept. 12 to the custody of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Zakharov, an employee of the So viet mission to the United Nations who is charged with espionage, was turned over to the custody of the So viet mission in New York pending further court proceedings. CS awaiting response from GSU on rate hike By Craig Renfro Stall Writer Htllege Station of ficials are await- ng Gulf State Utilities’ response to a proposed 7 percent rate increase for wholesale electric customers, Mayor Larry Ringer said Sunday. .elf-con- much o ;ding in an aspi 3sy, self ily inde his man >: polo oodying go nee. f s a tra- h Lauren Motorcycle accident kills A&M student ■Funeral services were to be held today for one Texas A&M student while another student re mained in a Houston intensive cate unit following a Thursday traffic accident. BiServices for Mark Allan Chil- dress, 20, were scheduled for 10 a.m. at the Klein Funeral Home chapel in Tomball. ■fPiildress, of Houston, was killed Thursday afternoon near ■vasota when the motorcycle he was riding collided head-on with a pickup truck, a Bryan Depart ment of Public Safety spokeswo man said. pthildress, who was not wearing asalety helmet, was pronounced dead at Grimes County Hospital .u4:23 p.m. ■The driver of the motorcycle, Stephen Robert Johnson, 19, from Pasadena, was flown by Ufdlight helicopter from Grimes County Hospital to St. Luke’s Hospital in Houston. Johnson, who was wearing a safety helmet, was still in intensive care Sunday night with internal chest injuries, I hut a hospital spokeswoman re- * ported he was in good condition. /■IPS said the accident occurred i about nine miles east of Navasota "when a truck traveling south on FM 405 collided with the north- t bound motorcycle. North Bardell, Lone Star Munici pal Power Agency executive direc tor, said College Station residents will pay less for electricity than they did two years ago if the proposal is accepted. Under the proposal, the city will buy large bulks of electricity at re duced rates and pass the savings on to the consumer, he said. Bardell said the LSMPA proposed the increase after their wholesale customers complained about the possibility of a 40 percent increase. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which regulates whole sale rates, granted GSU an interim 40 percent rate increase Aug. 25. If the increase had taken effect, Col lege Station would have had the highest electricity bills in the state, Bardell said. He said he hopes the proposal will be accepted by GSU. “GSU doesn't" want to be tbe bad guy,” he said. College Station and three other cities — Caldwell, Newton and Kir- byville — buy electricity wholesale f rom GSU, then resell it to their resi dents. After GSU’s customers com- plained, GSU proposed a 24 percent rate increase Sept. 8, Bardell said. The College Station City Council held a special session Sept. 11 to dis cuss GSU’s latest offer. Under that proposal GSU would supply power to College Station through July 1, 1987, he said. How ever, the proposal would allow GSU to cancel the contract with a 30-day notice, Bardell said. Bardell said city officials wanted the same option to back out of the contract as GSU had. Under tbe new proposal the city has the same option to cancel the contract as GSU, he said. “Under the new proposal each side has the right to decide when they want to get out,” Bardell said. “This new proposal is much fairer.” Tax reform to restrict bond sales Texas Water Plan in danger By Dawn Butz Staff Writer Federal tax reform would cripple the Texas Water Plan by placing new restrictions on the sale of tax-exempt municipal bonds, a Texas Water Alliance of ficial says. The new water plan, approved in November 1985 by about 72 percent of Texas voters, autho rized the sale of $980 million in municipal bonds to aid in water project development. Steve Stagner, executive direc tor for the Texas Water Alliance, said in an interview last week he believes the proposed legislation will increase water development costs at the local level, putting the financial burden on water users. The tax bill puts a limit on the amount of tax-exempt private ac tivity bonds that can be sold in a state in a given year. By 1988, the state will be limited to $800 mil lion in these bonds. Previously, private activity bonds were categorized as such if more than 25 percent of the pro ceeds were used by a trade or business. The tax bill would re duce the maximum percentage to 10 percent. This means that an estimated one-quarter to one-half of all wa ter and sewer projects would fall into this category, amounting to over $300 million per year by vol ume, Stagner says. Also squeezed under this cap are bonds for multi-family rental housing, single family housing, student loans, redevelopment, and gas and electric systems — all involved with private activity bonds. An indication of the severity of this limitation is the Texas 1984 total private activity bond sales of $2.3 billion. Meeting this $800 million cap will mean a 66 per cent decrease from the 1984 vol ume, Stagner says. Several categories of bonds can be issued without limit, including bonds for tax-exempt entities such as hospitals and universities. Thus, cities will be left to compete with single family housing and student loans for private activity bonds to build a water plant. The tax bill also places new re strictions on issuance costs — all costs leading up to the issuing of the bonds — limiting them to 2 percent of the total cost of the project. Stagner says this con straint will make some projects, especially the smaller ones, im possible. Stagner says he feels govern ment reform has gone too far, and that traditional governmen tal activities should have been protected. Two other water programs af fected by the tax reform bond is sue are the federal government’s construction grant program, un der which local governments can receive federal grants to build needed sewage treatment facili ties, and the state’s loan program for sewer and water supply pro jects, whereby local governments can borrow money from the state to finance such projects. Through the federal construc tion grants program, eligible po litical entities can receive grants to pay for up to 55 percent of the cost of new projects to meet cur rent wastewater treatment needs. Eligible local governments sub mit plans and given a priority ranking with cities in the same population group. Congress has not yet appropri ated money for the federal fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, 1987. The amount allotted will determine how many grants are issued. In Texas the program is ad ministered by the Texas Water Development Board for the Envi ronmental Protection Agency. The board also administers the Texas loan program for sewer and water supply projects. Both programs will be hurt by the new tax reform, a TWDB of ficial says, but implementation of the loan program will be greatly affected because of the proce dure used in offering the loans. Ray Grasshoff, information of ficer for the board, said in an in terview last week that the loans are made when the state buys the bonds the local government is sues. “If those aren’t tax deductible, they cost more and the interest rates are higher,” Grasshoff says. Cargo ships transport nuclear weapons WASHINGTON (AP) — The Navy uses at least two cargo ships sailed by civilian crews to transport nuclear missiles across the Atlantic, according to public documents and sources. The ships, assigned to the Military Sealift Command, have been given the job of ferrying ballistic missiles of the type deployed on submarines to and from various sub bases — pri marily Charleston, S.C., King’s Bay, Ga., and Holy Loch, Scotland. Defense analysts who specialize in the study of nuclear weapons say such movements are not unusual be cause of the United States’ emphasis on frequent inspections to ensure safety and reliability. The role of the Military Sealift Command in such transport work, however, is largely unknown and be lies the common perception that nu clear weapons assigned to the Navy are handled only by active-duty per sonnel. And unlike the cargo ships or am munition ships that are accompa nied by Navy battle groups, MSC ships frequently ply the oceans with out escort by armed warships. William Arkin, an analyst with the Institute for Policy Studies, a liberal Washington think tank, said, “Most people don’t realize how often we move nuclear weapons. It’s a daily event because of maintenance re quirements, safety checks, upgrades and replacements with new weap onry.” Navy officials who requested ano nymity said missiles such as the Tri dent deployed on Ohio-class subma rines and the Poseidon on older subs are too large to make aerial trans port feasible. Navy literature states the cargo ships always carry a small detail of seven to 10 active-duty sailors re sponsible for communications and security. Navy sources say the vessels also rely on the anonymity that ac companies their outward appear ance as standard cargo ships and the Navy’s policy of never confirming nor denying the presence of nuclear weapons. The vessels are carefully tracked during their voyages and are in con stant communication with Navy fa cilities.