The Battalion ol, 82 No. 67 USPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Thursday, December 4, 1986 Poindexter refuses to give details of sales WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- ;nt Reagan’s former national secu- y adviser refused Wednesday to ve Congress details of the secret leipfweapons to Iran or the diver- on of profits to Nicaraguan rebels, ce President George Bush con- ded that the spiraling controversy jsharmed the administration, say- g, "Clearly, mistakes were made.” lice Adm. John M. Poindexter ejame the second recently-de- Rfd administration official to in- oke the Fifth Amendment in de- itiing to answer questions f rom the enate Intelligence Committee. His one-time aide, Lt. Col. Oliver Brth. did so on Monday, and com- ittee members said they were con- Sering possibly seeking grants of nmunity from prosecution to se- ure testimony by both men. ■n. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., vice ■man of the committee, vowed at lawmakers would piece together tei ts “with or without them,” and ft committee members said that nipecified Cabinet secretaries will ftalled to the panel’s heavily uarded room to testify. ■hile Congress continued delv- igi ito the most serious crisis of the Poll: Reagan should resign if lying about arms sales WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly half of the Americans polled by ABC News think Presi dent Reagan should resign if he’s lying about when he learned about the Contra connection to U.S. arms shipments to Iran, while the rest believe Reagan should not resign even if he has lied, according to the survey. The survey of 505 Americans, released Wednesday, also found that the president’s overall appro val rating has dropped nearly 20 points since September to 49 per cent. The figure represents the lowest rating for Reagan since April 1983. However, the poll found a slight improvement in the presi dent’s overall credibility on the arms shipments controversy, with 49 percent saying Reagan has been lying and 47 percent saying he has been telling the truth. The percentage of people who believe the president was 37 percent in an ABC poll on Nov. 19 and 40 percent on Nov. 25. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points. It was conducted Tuesday night by telephone. Reagan presidency, there was in creasing pressure for the departure of Donald T. Regan, the president’s powerful chief of staff. But White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Regan has no in tention of leaving and said the presi dent “has not asked him to leave.” Reagan did not discuss possible staff changes when he spoke to busi nesswomen in the White House. In stead, he said he hoped the furor would not undercut support for the Contra forces fighting the Sandi- nista government in Nicaragua. “We cannot let recent events dis tract us from the cause of those brave fighters for freedom around the world,” he said. As his audience applauded, Reagan said, “Yes, you did just make my day.” Reagan could not have been as pleased with the word he received earlier in the day from key GOP con gressional leaders. One participant, speaking on con dition he not be identified by name, said Reagan was advised to seek changes in his administration. Outside the White House, Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kan sas said the message to Reagan was this: “There are going to be more and more stories, every day there will be something new. Some other player will be involved, somebody the president never even heard of.” Bush’s comments came in a speech in which he said he fully sup ported Reagan’s decision to make se cret arms sales to Iran, but knew nothing of the diversion of profits to the Contra forces. Reagan also says he knew nothing of the diversion of funds until Attor ney General Edwin Meese III told him a little more than a week ago. In voicing strong words of sup port for Reagan, Bush added, “There is no denying that our credi bility has been damaged by this en tire episode and its aftermath.” Bush said the shaping of the Ira nian policy involved difficult choices and was clouded by the way in which the president’s goals were executed, “specifically allegations about certain activities of the National Security Council staff.” Defense Secretary Caspar Wein berger, in France on an official trip, said Reagan received bad advice from aides advising him on a new policy toward Iran. “What he was trying to do was to open an agreement and an arrangement with people whom he had been advised were of a far different character than the people he was quite prop erly denouncing as being fanatical lunatics in Iran. “I think unfortunately some of that advice has not turned out to have been accurate or correct,” Weinberger said. Meanwhile, Transportation De partment documents show that a former CIA air transport company, said to have played key roles in both arms sales to Irans and shipments to the Nicaraguan rebels, flew more than 400 tons of cargo this year into an air base used by an American- manned Contra resupply operation. Southern Air Transport of Miami reported it made 15 flights into a military airport in El Salvador. The flights coincide with creation of an air resupply wing to carry weapons to the Contra rebels — an effort that government sources said anonymously was managed by North. While the administration awaited appointment of an independent counsel to investigate the once-secret arms sale to Iran and the tunneling of profits through a Swiss bank ac count to Nicaraguan forces, Senate leaders appeared headed for cre ation of a single “supercommittee” to conduct its own probe. .et There Be Light Electrician George Lovell works in a “cherry picker” repairing a parking lot light at the Redmond Terrace Shopping Center Wednesday. Vandiver finalist for UH spot Texas A&M President Frank Vandiver is one of five finalists left from a field of 152 consid ered for the vacant University of Houston system chancellor’s posi tion. The position has been open since Sept. 1, when Charles E. Bishop resigned to accept a re search and teaching position with the University of North Carolina. Bishop had been the top exec utive of UH’s four-campus sys tem for six years, earning $ 139,000 annually. Vandiver issued a statement Wednesday about his nomi nation, saying he was flattered by the offer but that it was too early to comment. “I am flattered to have been nominated and considered a fi nalist for the position of chan cellor at the University of Hous ton,” Vandiver said. “I am happy to be president of Texas A&M University and it is simply prema ture to comment on a position that has not been offered to me.” Trish Healy, an information specialist for UH, said the chan cellor most likely will be selected by the end of this month. bunty attorney Hows students lo make restitution Court to say if bias law covers AIDS patients By Christi Daugherty Staff Writer Jhe five A&M students charged ih misdemeanor theft of long-dis- ancc service in the past few weeks ylhone companies other than Star «nay be let off the hook after all. Brazos County Attorney Jim Ku- bovi k said he has decided to give hose diarged by other phone com plies the same chances for leniency teis being granted by Star Tel. Hf the students that were hfged, these non-athletes with tomplainants other than Star Tel, Cotton Bowl jckets to be bid Monday ^Student tickets for the 1987 Rltton Bowl will go on sale Mon- dav at 7 a.m. for $25 apiece at the || Rollie White Coliseum ticket "jndows, Texas A&M Ticket ftnager Jim Kotch said Wednes- da\. I Kotch said tickets will be lim- Ked to six per student. Each Cot ton Bowl ticket request must be accompanied by a season ticket book and half of those ticket books must be of either graduate plj senior classification for Mon day s ticket dispersal, Kotch said. ■Further ticket information will ^available Friday, he said. wanted to make restitution, then I would allow them the same deal that Star Tel made,” Kuboviak said. He said he felt he had to make the move in the interest of fairness. Star Tel is granting a 15-day pe riod of amnesty, allowing all who have used Star Tel access codes ille gally to pay the charges and avoid prosecution. Other long-distance services, in particular MCI, have expressed op position to any sort of amnesty plan, and MCI strongly emphasizes legal prosecution as a crime deterrent. Kathleen Keegan, an MCI spokes man in New York, said MCI had not heard about Kuboviak’s decision, but would not object. “We put the matter into the hands of the county attorney, and we will stand by whatever he decides,” Kee gan said. Kuboviak said he had not as yet informed the companies of his deci sion, because although they will have some input into the matter, the final decision is his. He said that since people are now aware that prosecution is a possi- blity, he plans to be more severe if the problem arises again. Since he has never encountered the problem before, and suddenly has many cases of it, he said he feels the industry is trying to make exam ples of the students they’ve caught. “I’m going to take a harder stand on it next time, but I’m adjusting my philosophy on the existing cases based upon what Star Tel has done,” Kuboviak said. “Since Star Tel made the decision to accept restitution. I See Restitution, page 10 WASHINGTON (AP) — In a case that may af fect the rights of AIDS victims, the Supreme Court was told Wednesday that a federal law banning bias against the handicapped does not protect people with contagious diseases. “This cannot be what Congress had in mind,” Solicitor General Charles Fried, the Reagan ad ministration’s top courtroom lawyer, said in urging the justices to rule that people with conta gious illnesses are not covered by the 1973 anti bias law. With a nationwide debate over AIDS discrimi nation as a backdrop, the court must decide whether all recipients of federal aid — including virtually all public schools — are barred from dis criminating against people with contagious dis eases. Gay rights activists say the decision may affect the national debate on AIDS even though the Su preme Court case does not involve a victim of ac quired immune deficiency syndrome, a deadly disease that to date mainly has afflicted homosex uals. The U.S. Public Health Service says there are no known cases of anyone getting AIDS through casual contact. But there is a great deal of public fear about how contagious it might be, and there have been efforts to bar AIDs carriers from schools and work places. During Wednesday’s 60-minute argument ses sion, however, AIDS was mentioned only once. George Rahdert, a lawyer representing a third-grade teacher fired after she was diagnosed as having tuberculosis, argued that a Justice De partment memorandum on AIDS wrongly sug gests that an employer legally can fire people based on an irrational fear that they may spread the disease. Gene H. Arline sued the Nassau County, Fla., School Board after she was fired as a teacher be cause she had tuberculosis, an infectious respira tory disease. Fiscal officer: Future of TAEX lies in use of mass communications Editor’s note: This is the third in a three-part series on the ef fects of state budget cuts and Texas’ slumping oil economy on the Texas Agricultural Extension Service. Part 3 examines the TAEX’ future. By Bob Grube Staff Writer As Texas and Texans try to weather the storm of oil slumps and budget cuts, the Texas Agri cultural Extension Service is rid ing in the eye of the storm — rela tively speaking. Ronald Jackson, fiscal officer for the TAEX, says it is better off than many state agencies, but it’s still smarting from budget cuts — about $2.8 million for the 1986- 1987 biennium — it took from the Legislature’s second special session in September and from Gov. Mark White’s hiring freeze. “There’s no bright light on the horizon that shows we’re going to fill all the empty positions that have been empty since the gover nor’s hiring freeze,” Jackson says. “The Legislative Budget Board approved us for even funding for the next biennium,” he says. “It means that there won’t be any more cutbacks and that we’ll be able to restore programs that there is a significant need for.” So far in Brazos County, no programs have been cut, thanks to County Agriculture Program Leader Jim Mazurkiewicz. But the budget cuts have re duced the county’s extension of fice staff from five to three, and the reduction in staff is taking its toll on the remaining agents. Jackson says the TAEX budget cuts are not as dramatic or as visi ble to the public as are cuts in other agencies, but he says the TAEX feels a hiring freeze the same way another agency feels a layoff. “Today, we (TAEX) have one subject matter specialist for ap proximately every 30 counties in the state,” Jackson says. “In the future, we may be less accessible than we are now,” he says. “Instead of serving 30 coun ties, the specialist may have to serve about 90 counties.” With hiring freezes, staff re ductions and budget cuts, the fu ture for increased funding looks bleak for state-funded agencies in Texas. How will the TAEX deal with this bleak future? Jackson says the economic fu ture of the TAEX lies in mass communication methods that reach more people for the dollar rather than the more traditional individual, personal communica tion methods. “We’re going to more of a mass media-type situation,” Jackson says. “We’re really going to have to get into videos,” he says. “We can produce educational and topical videos and air them on the educa tional television channels.” Another high-technology com munication method, the Tele- Tips telephone program, is being used in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Tele-Tips is a computerized educational tape system that al lows the caller to choose from a See TAEX, page 14