V The'Battalion Vol. 87 Mo. 45 CJSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Monday, November 2, 1987 Little drummer band The percussion section of the Southern Methodist University band plays during halftime this weekend at the A&M game. The Mustang Photo by Robert W. Rizzo band was invited to perform at the Aggie game as a show of good sportsmanship toward the school. Court faces nominee questions on cable deal WASHINGTON (AP) — Su preme Court nominee Douglas H. Ginsburg had almost $140,000 in vested in a cable television corpora tion when he “personally handled” a Justice Department effort to have the court extend First Amendment protection to cable operators. An administration source close to Ginsburg said Sunday that Ginsburg apparently did not raise the possibil ity of staying out of the case with Jus tice Department superiors or with agency ethics officers. He said Ginsburg discussed the situation with a subordinate. The Supreme Court, on June 2, 1986, adopted Ginsburg’s argu ments in a decision that will reduce government regulation of cable op erators. “It is a First Amendment rights case that had economic conse quences to it. . a former federal ethics official familiar with the cable case but not with Ginsburg’s role in it said. “If I’m holding cable stock, that is a good thing for me.” Ginsburg, nominated by Presi dent Reagan to succeed retired Jus tice Lewis Powell on the court, ap parently did not violate criminal conflict of interest laws because the company in which he invested was not a direct party to the case even though it could benefit from the rul ing. But ethics experts said Ginsburg’s actions could be viewed as skirting a presidential executive order forbid ding actions that create an appear ance of a conflict of interest or of fa voritism. Violation of that order carries ad ministrative penalties, such as a let ter of reprimand or suspension. Ginsburg, through his informal spokesman W. Stephen Cannon, de clined on Sunday to comment on his role in the cable case until he has an opportunity to review his records. A former head of the Justice De partment’s antitrust division and now a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judge, Ginsburg, 41, is little known to the public, and his professional performance is being scrutinized by the Senate Judiciary Committee in preparation for confirmation hear ings. Ginsburg was assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust di vision at the Justice Department when the Reagan administration filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a Los Angeles cable television case. During his confirmation hearings last year, Ginsburg wrote the Judi ciary Committee that the cable case was among the 10 “most significant litigated matters that I personally handled.” “I was a principal participant in determining the government’s posi tion . . . and supervised the drafting of our brief,” he wrote of the cable brief. lection ballot provides record number of propositions By Doug Driskell Staff Writer Tomorrow is an election day dif ferent than any other election day. It comes at a time when Texas is in fi nancial dispair. For Bryan-College Station, there are no city policies on the ballot. It is an off-election. This ballot has more propositions on it than ever before in Texas his tory. There are 25 constitutional am- mendment propositions and two ref- erendums on the ballot. This is seen as a hurdle for proposition campain- ers to overcome. “Part of the problem we see from the ballot standpoint, is the fact that there are more propositions on the ballot than ever before in the history Texas,” Tom Vickers, Bexar jnty Judge and chairman of the Id Texas Committee, said. “This Id have a tendency to be confus- to the average voter.” •reposition 19 and referendum 2 e had much attention. •reposition 19, if voted into law, provide $500 million in general gation bonds to help convince federal government to locate the erconductor supercollider pro in Texas, Vickers said, f the supercollider is built it is ex- ted to create 4,500 construction > and 5,600 jobs in services and ply resulting in $20 million led into the Texas economy dur- the life of the project, said Matt m, a representative of the Super- ider Committee. ’roposition 19 has no organized losition, Vickers said. Leferendum 2 pertains to the le- zation of pari-mutuel betting on se and dog races. Supporters, the Texas Horse Racing Associa tion, of this referendum see the le galization of pari-mutuel betting as bringing the horse breeding indus try back to Texas, therefore bring ing more money into Texas. Opponents, like the Texans Who Care, see pari-mutuel betting bring ing organized crime to Texas. They argue the money brought in from pari-mutuel betting is not enough to really help the budget. Other amendments on referen dum on the ballot are: • Amendment No. 1 — This would establish a grain warehouse self-insurance fund to guarantee payment to farmers, with public money, in case of defaults. This proposition is a result of some grain warehouses going out of business and leaving farmers with out full payment for the grain they had stored in the warehouse. If passed, it should reduce cost of busi ness for the operation of grain eleva tors. It would provide assurance to farmers to have grain in state-ap proved warehouses. The downside is that it will rely on state taxes until the funds are built up. • Amendment No. 2 — This would raise property taxes in certain unincorporated, rural, fire districts. • Amendment No. 3 — If passed, this will limit school tax increases on the homestead of surviving elderly spouses. • Amendment No. 4 — This would permit the Legislature to au thorize the loans and grants that would fund the Texas Agricultural Fund, the Texas Small Business In cubator fund and the Texas Product Development Fund, which would be established by Proposition No. 6. It also would permit local governments to issue general obligation bonds for economic development programs, subject to voter approval. Alone, it would not obligate any state money. Other constitutional amendments would have to be approved to allo cate money. • Amendment No. 5 — This amendment would allow the State Highway Department and the Texas Turnpike Authority to cooperate in road and bridge building using pub lic monies to guarantee bond issues. • Amendment No. 6 — This would permit the Legislature to fi nance Texas products and busi nesses. • Amendment No. 7 — This would provide state bonds for local public works projects. This could help Bryan-College Station. It would allow local communities to borrow money from the state thus giving a lower interest rate than if they bor rowed from private institutions. • Amendment No. 8 — This would provide bonds to pay for cor rectional, mental health and mental retardation facilities. • Amendment No. 9 — This would allow legislators to seek dif ferent state offices while restricting pay increases for the new office they may have previously voted to ap prove. The current state constitution says any legislator who voted on a pay increase for the attorney general could not later run for attorney gen eral. If approved, legislators could run or be appointed to an office, but they would not receive their pay in crease until a certain time period has elapsed. • Amendment No. 10 — This would allow local voters to approve ecurity adviser expects Senate d approve nuclear missile treaty WASHINGTON (AP) — National security adviser Frank C. Carlucci said Sunday that a U.S.-Soviet accord on intermediate-range nu clear missiles is “98 percent of the way there” and predicted Senate ra tification. However, a leading Senate Demo- trat warned that the superpower pact could be doomed if conserva tive Republicans tamper with it by attaching amendments on issues like the Soviet occupation of Afghani stan. “I do think that there could be problems,” said Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., the Senate Democratic whip who is also a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Select Committee on Intelli gence. “There are 15-20 very conserva tive Republican senators who I think are very likely to take on the treaty directly, and I think there are others who might take it on by indirection. . . ,” he said on NBC-TV’s “Meet the Press.” “They might well suggest va rious reservations or amendments that would, in effect, kill it.” Sen. Richard Lugar, a leading Re publican and a member of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, also predicted some tough sailing in the Senate for an INF treaty. “I think there are a number of Re publican senators, and there’ll be a few Democrats who are not in favor of any treaty with the Soviet Union, feel it’s unverifiable, unenforcea ble,” the Indiana Republican said on measures that would exempt certain personal property not used to pro duce income from taxes. • Amendment No. 11 — This would exempt property held within the state temporarily for manufac turing and processing. If a ship were to import steel for the building of an oil rig that steel would not be taxed until the construction began. • Amendment No. 12 — This would allow married couples to own community property with the right of survivorship. • Amendment No. 13 — This would allow creations of districts to provide emergency fire and medical services. These districts could create new taxes to support these services. • Amendment No. 14 — This would allow the state a limited right to appeal in criminal cases. Cur rently the state does not have this right. • Amendment No. 15 — This would do away with the office of County Treasurer in Fayette, Nueces and Gregg Counties. • Amendment No. 16 — This would allow for more than one jus tice of the peace in larger counties. • Amendment No. 17 — This would give the state legislature, not the courts, the power to determine how much liability a city has for each of its activities. If passed it could sta bilize insurance costs for cities. This directly effects Bryan-College Sta tion. • Amendment No. 18 — This would create jail districts that would construct and operate county jails. • Amendment No. 19 — This w r ould provide state money for the superconductor supercollider. • Amendment No. 20 — This would allow for the tax exemption of idle offshore oil equipment. • Amendment No. 21 — This would include the speaker of the house as member of executive agen cies or committees." • Amendment No. 22 — This would limit the appointing of office vacancies by a lame-duck governor. • Amendment No. 23 — This would issue $400 milion in bonds for water supply, water quality and flood control. • Amendment No. 24 — This would allow one county to work for another without compensation. • Amendment No. 25 — This would allow hospital districts to change boundary jurisdiction with the distric’s voter approval. It would also permit Amarillo Hospital Dis trict to serve Randall County resi dents. • Referendum No. 1 — A “no” vote would allow citizens to elect the members of the State Board of Edu cation. A “yes” vote would mean re taining the appointed board system. This will not effect the quality of ed ucation. • Referendum No. 2 — This would legalize pari-mutuel betting on horse and dog races. Research assistance was given by Dr. Gary Halter in the Political Sci ence Department, Dr. Roland D. Smith in the Agriculture Economics Department and the Free Market Foundation. The polling location on campus will be in the Memorial Student Cen ter.For off-campus locations, call (409) 361-4490. ABC-TV’s “This Week with David Brinkley.” Lugar said he is inclined to favor the treaty but is holding off a final decision until he sees the finished Carlucci, who accompanied Secre tary of State George P. Shultz on his trip to Moscow a week and a half ago, said he didn’t foresee any prob lems in Congress for the treaty. “We think it will be ratified,” he said on the NBC program. “It’s a good treaty. “It’s been carefully worked out and the verification provisions are going to be the most intrusive in the history of arms control.” Carlucci said the accord is “98 percent of the way there.” A&M’s patented research development could prove useful in testing, fighting AIDS By Jenny Hynes Reporter A recently patented process created through Texas A&M re search may prove useful in accu rately testing and fighting the AIDS virus. “If we are correct, we may have an explosive impact because the procedure would have uses as a test and a vaccine,” says Stephen Wechter, a scientist who was in volved in the project as a research assistant for the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medi cine at A&M’s College of Medi cine. Dr. Luther Lindner, an asso ciate professor in the depart ment, was also involved in the re search, which developed a procedure that has detected ac quired immune deficiency syn drome (AIDS) during laboratory tests. Unlike AIDS tests now on the market, which test for the pres ence of Human Immunodefi ciency Virus, a factor found in those exposed to the AIDS virus, the new process uses a different concept. “We identify people with AIDS using something else — a specific antibody,” Wechter says. “I feel that we have a predictive test for those exposed to HIV who may get the disease.” In developing their testing method, which was patented in September, Lindner and Wechter used a colony of monkeys already showing clinical signs similar to those found in human AIDS pa tients. From these animals they isolated antibodies — disease fighting cells — that react with human AIDS tissue. Lindner says while there is great potential for the project, more research is needed to pro duce a useful test. “It still is basically a fairly crude system,” he says. “What remains to be done is to identify exactly what the antibodies were reacting to and their relationship to the disease. Once that is done we can determine whether the thing can actually be developed.” Wechter says the process could eventually help in the fight against AIDS in three ways: pro duction of a vaccine to prevent the disease, a method of screen ing for AIDS before symptoms appear and a drug to treat the disease. The research, which Lindner says was conducted over a period of about U/a years, stopped two years ago — before a usable prod uct was formed. He says this was because of the sale of the animal colony and the lack of appropri ate researchers at A&M who could continue the study. Wechter has since formed his own company, Scientific Ven tures International, and is work ing in Houston to secure support for more research on the finding. Lindner says although their work is promising, no company has yet contracted for licensing of the research for two reasons. “First of all, it is not a devel oped system at this point,” he says. “(The companies) can’t look at it and say, ‘This is going to be commercially valuable,’ so anyone who picks up the patent is taking a big gamble. “The other thing is the time frame. Because there are already a bunch of commercial tests out based on the HIV, getting this to a commercially viable point would take a couple more years.” Lindner and Wechter hold rights to the process and will re ceive royalties if any commercial use is made of their findings. “Assuming anything ever comes of it — after the expenses of the patent are paid off and that sort of wonderful stuff — some thing would probably eventually come down the pipeline,” Lindner says. After patent expenses are paid from royalties, the University and the developers split the income evenly.