1 private t said, "f ris- 1 Ten- is very X pri- in the ort of is,” he m the T and otiated ild be if the ie cor- lercem iposed I have cost es- oblems control o liabi- :? The whose i are? lly isn't The Battalion Vol.82 No.l 10 CiSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 3, 1987 re all af e kind t sjobar: iccts of what kf 1 didn't didn’t rt cause b used lot reactf i repo; d" by til: spoke xrrt's re lidn't it- e (fror oort, an: ant upcoir. ages the ; waked ■eport b v Tovit weekett * 1 Photo by Dean Saito On The Flying Trapeze Chris Garhold, a junior marketing major from Victoria, dives for a trapeze bar between two trees as classmates make sure he doesn’t fall. The activ ity is part of the venture dynamics class offered by Texas A&M’s physical education department and is intended to make students trust their classmates. President withdraws nominee for CIA post WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan on Monday withdrew his nomination of acting CIA Direc tor Robert M. Gates to head the spy agency, saying confirmation hear ings at this time “would not be in the interest of the CIA or of the nation.” In a statement read to reporters by his new chief of staff, Howard H. Baker Jr., Reagan said he withdrew the nomination at Gates’ request. Baker also read to reporters a let ter from Gates to the president, say ing, “It is apparent that there is strong sentiment in the Senate to await completion, at minimum, of the work of the Senate Select Com mittee on Iran before acting on my nomination. “I believe a prolonged period of uncertainty would be harmful to the Central Intelligence Agency, the in telligence community and poten tially to our national security.” Baker said Gates met with the president Monday afternoon. Reagan’s statement said he ac cepted Gates’ request “with great re gret.” Reagan said, “I have asked Bob to continue serving as deputy director of intelligence under a new direc tor.” Praising Gates’ 20-year record of service to the CIA, he said, “I have been impressed with the class he has shown under the enormous pres sures of recent weeks. “At any other time, I am certain that he would easily have been con firmed without delay.” Baker said selection of a new nominee would be “an urgent item on the president’s agenda” and some names had already been discussed. Gates met with Baker and Presi dent Reagan’s national security ad viser, Frank C. Carlucci, for about 30 minutes earlier in the day. Before the meeting, Marlin Fitz- water, assistant to the president for press relations, said, “The president stands behind his nomination of Robert Gates to be CIA director. I have seen the stories about Robert Gates’ consideration of this matter, but I don’t have any direct knowl edge of his position.” “It’s a matter for Robert Gates to decide. The president made the nomination and he thinks it’s a good one, and I won’t have any comment on that.” Monday was Baker’s first day as chief of staff. He was chosen by Rea gan on Friday to replace Donald T. Regan, whose handling of the Iran- Contra crisis was sharply criticized in the Tower report. Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said Sunday that Gates’ nomination “could be in some difficulty” if brought to a confirma tion vote soon after the Tower re port, and other senators have been even more negative about Gates’ chances in the current climate. Gates, 43, was picked to head the CIA after William Casey resigned in December because of brain cancer. Arms control talks extended following Soviet concession lun- ving etof D is £ Dis r 3StO one rivafe prison debate robes more than costs By Amy Couvillon Staff Writer The debate over private prisons in Efexas includes ideological questions as well as monetary issues, said a [Texas A&M professor familiar with he Texas prison system. “There are issues other than just lollars and cents that are raised in his debate,” said Dr. Ben Crouch, ssociate professor of sociology. Prison Privatization ?arttwo of a fwo-parf series tea" 1 ' many issues raised are purely the- retical, he said. “For example, should the govern- ent pass on to someone else its so- ial-control function?” Crouch isked. “Is that not a fundamental re- |uirement of the state?” he said. “If you privatize all that, are you not Relegating something that is quintes- sentially a function of a government, not of private industry?” Considering the often violent na ture of the prison environment, an ther important consideration is the uestion of liability. When a private corporation is running a prison, and something joes wrong, who can be sued? “Those are questions that are of ykal importance, particularly in a so- :ety as litigious as this one,” Crouch id. “Ultimately, presumably, the state ■ responsible because the state con victed them,” he said. “It has turned over their care and custody to a pri vate firm, but it does not cut them hose; the state must still parole them. So the state never cuts that ju risdictional umbilical cord.” 1 Problems might arise in a future situation where the private firm runs the entire operation and the state just pays the bills, Crouch said. T'You could have the state saying, I wasn’t there; I wasn’t involved in the loss of that man’s hand, or that man's life, or that fire or riot,’ ” Crouch said. “But the state sent lem there.” In addition to the liability ques tion, there also could be problems th the transition from public to private ownership. ■ “There are some political issues,” ht said. “Prison personnel are con cerned that if all this begins to be come private, what will happen to their jobs? There may be some strat egic issues. “Some prison managers may re sist, not necessarily because they think they may lose their jobs, but because of a sense of expertise: Tve been in this business for twenty years. Who are you to come in and take over?’ ” There are some large corpora tions such as RCA Corp., Crouch said, that have diversified into some states’ prison operations as part of their many enterprises, and the fact that a corporation could buy a prison just like any other business has the potential to rankle prison of ficials. “What large corporations are in the business of doing is making money,” Crouch said. “Some of them own ball teams or whatever; some of these apparently are getting into the prison business.” However, other corporations have been formed solely for the purpose of running prisons, he said. One ex ample is the Corrections Corp. of America, based in Nashville, Tenn. Corrections Corp., less than a de cade old, runs a county jail in Pan ama City, Fla., he said, as well as other operations around the nation. The firm was one of several that put in bids to build a 1,000-bed prison in Harris County near Houston, he said. Charles Brown, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Correc tions, said TDC had consulted with Corrections Corp. to discuss the pos sibility of a privately-run Texas prison, but that no decison had been made. “Privatization (in prisons) really hasn’t been going on that long to see the feasibility of it, or how cost-effec tive it would be,” Brown said. “It’s a viable option, but we would have to look at it.” A bill authorizing private Texas prisons is now in committee in the Texas House. Crouch said the bill could serve to legitimize more exten sive privatization of Texas prisons. “I think in Texas, the reason they’re having this bill is there is no precedent for doing this,” he said. “And it’s not possible for one person to say, ‘Hey, let’s hire somebody to keep these prisoners.’ We need an open, representative debate on these issues.” Crouch explained that completely turning over prison operations to private industry is the extreme case, and that there are many in-between scenerios of privatization already be ing used in Texas. A frequent kind of privatization is for services, Crouch said, such as construction, where the state would grant a contract to a private com pany to build a prison, then pay the company on completion of the pro- ject. “A strategy having the private firm provide the financing and the construction is speedier,” Crouch said, “and may permit the state to move more quickly than they would be able to if they had to get voter ap proval or float bonds.” Contracting services out to private See Prisons, page 10 GENEVA (AP) — American and Soviet arms control negotiators met in special session Monday, and the Soviets presented Mikhail S. Gorba chev’s new proposal to eliminate me dium-range missiles in Europe. Searching for a breakthrough in the negotiations, the two sides agreed to extend the talks indefi nitely. U.S. officials in Washington said the American side would re spond by presenting a draft treaty to remove intermediate-range missiles now aimed at Soviet and European targets. Soviet officials said Gorbachev made his new offer on Saturday in an attempt to break the Geneva deadlock. The proposal dropped a Soviet demand that the United States restrict its Star Wars program before an arms control package could be agreed on. European governments generally reacted favorably to the Soviet initia tive but cautioned that they would want to examine it closely before moving toward banning Soviet SS-20 missiles and NATO’s U.S.-made Pershing 2 and cruise missiles that are now being deployed. British Foreign Secretary Sir Goeffrey Howe said, “We shall need to look carefully at the fine print.” The missiles that would be scrapped under an agreement in clude 316 U.S.-made cruise and Per shing 2 missiles already deployed in Western Europe. In all, 572 are to be deployed. On the Soviet side. Western offi cials estimate that 441 medium- range SS-20s have been deployed in the Soviet Union. Gen. Sergei F. Akhromeyev, Soviet chief of staff, said on Monday that 243 of the SS- 20 missiles were aimed at Europe. The Soviet proposal would elimi nate medium-range missiles based in Europe over the next five years, with the Soviet Union keeping 100 mis siles on its Asian territory and the United States maintaining 100 on its territory. In Washington, the White House welcomed the Soviet move. But American officials said any agreement would seek to protect Western Europe with short-range nuclear weapons and the Americans would insist on verification to guard against Soviet cheating. Seven U.S. senators in Geneva said they were optimistic about the prospects for an agreement after meeting with both the U.S. and So viet delegations. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., told a news conference, “Each one of us is more optimistic leaving than com ing.” But he said the negotiations will be “tedious, and we all pray that the next round will lead to a great deal of progress so that drafting (of a treaty) can begin in the summer.” IRS official introduces simplified W-4 form WASHINGTON (AP) — The In ternal Revenue Service, apologizing for its confusing four-page tax-with holding form, offered a slimmed- down version Monday that will allow half of all taxpayers to complete the chore in 15 minutes. “The Internal Revenue Service has heard the reactions to the long form — from members of Congress, from the media and from individual taxpayers,” IRS Commissioner Law rence B. Gibbs told a news confer ence. “We have not ignored what we have heard.” What the agency heard was that the four-page W-4 released last No vember was incomprehensible. The IRS defended the form as meeting Congress’ requirement for a W-4 that allowed taxpayers accurately to match their withholding with actual tax liability. Accuracy is not enough if a form is too complex to understand, Gibbs said Monday, so the new two-page W-4A gives up some accuracy to get some simplicity. As a result, he cau tioned, the latest form is more likely than the four-page W-4 to result in overwithholding, although average refunds probably would be less than in the past. If the White House Office of Management and Budget goes along, the W-4A will be available to taxpayers in mid-April, Gibbs said. Campus presents physical challenge A&M students live with handicaps By Daniel A. La Bry Staff Writer While such tasks as pushing el evator buttons and opening doors often are thought of as trivial, they can become major obstacles for a handicapped individual. To bicycle riders on their way to class, sloped curve cuts are a convenience. But for the wheel chair-bound person, the curb cuts are necessary to get across the street. A handful of Texas A&M stu dents confront these problems every time they go to class. Laurie Marshall, a sophomore general studies major from Dal las, has been confined to a wheel chair because of a nervous disor der since she was in the eighth grade. Marshall says the main reason she came to A&M was the friendly atmosphere, but the ge ography of the campus ran a close second. After visiting seve ral Texas colleges, she found A&M to be one of the flattest and most accessible for a handicapped person in a wheelchair. A Fish Camp counselor for 1986 and 1987, Marshall says she has never let accessibility prob lems stop her from doing any thing. But when it comes to visiting friends in dorms, she usually re sorts to a piggyback ride in order to get to the proper floor, which, she says, is more of an inconve nience for her friends than for Handicapped Students at A&M Part one of a two-part series her, but that they usually are happy to oblige. Since the dorms at A&M aren’t equipped with elevators, those wheelchair-bound often experi ence access problems to upper- level floors. The first floors of Krueger and Dunn halls have rooms equipped for handicapped students. .Mar shall says modifications in her dorm room include wider doors, a bigger bathroom, a modified shower and lower light switches. Doing what most people think is a simple task can turn into quite an amusing experience, Marshall says. She can’t help laughing as she explains how she tried to bal ance books on her lap while jumping for the elevator buttons in the Harrington Classroom Building. Some isolated buildings on campus are problems for hand icapped students, but professors usually relocate a class if a hand icapped person is having trouble getting to the class. Marshall recalls having prob lems getting to a psychology class held in the Physics Building. Al though the building has been modified for handicapped stu dents, she had to use a key-oper ated wheelchair lift on the west side of the building to access an elevator which she then took to an upper-level floor. Then she had to wheel herself to the other side of the building. On the first day of class, Mar shall arrived just as the class was being let out, she says. The class then was relocated to a more ac cessible building. The Handicapped and Veter ans Services office in Hart Hall reviews Marshall’s class schedule, along with the schedules of other handicapped students, and sends letters to the appropriate instruc tors informing them that a hand icapped student will be attending their classes. Any foreseeable problem for the handicapped stu dent is then worked out between the student, the instructor and the handicapped services office. A common problem faced by handicapped students in almost all classes is taking tests. The problem is especially great for those who, like Marshall, don’t have full mobility in their hands. Marshall says it usually takes her twice as long as other stu dents to take an all-essay test, so many of the handicapped stu dents are allowed to take their tests in special, quiet rooms in the handicapped services office. Overall, A&M’s handicapped services seem to be up-to-date, Marshall says, but a few things on campus still bother her. For example, to get a book on the fifth or sixth floor of Sterling C. Evans Library, Marshall either See Handicapped, page 10