Angel (1984) Cliff Gorman The Battalion Vol. 87 No. 49 CISPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Friday, November 6, 1987 New nominee says he used drugs in past Reagan reaffirms support for embattled Ginsburg ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — Su preme Court nominee Douglas H. Binsburg admitted Thursday that Be used marijuana once in the 1960s Bnd on a few occasions in the 1970s and said, “It was a mistake and I re- Bret it.” f President Reagan and Attorney fceneral Edwin Meese III immedi- Btely pledged their continued sup port for Ginsburg, but Senate Re publican Leader Bob Dole issued a Statement that neither supported feior opposed his appointment. I Ginsburg issued his statement af- Rer National Public Radio asked for Bomment on its interviews indicating he had used marijuana while teach ing at Harvard Law School and had, bn at least one occasion, brought the substance to a gathering. NPR later paid a source close to Ginsburg called lo deny that he had brought the sub- jptance to a party. I “Earlier today, I was asked whether I had ever used drugs,” Ginsburg said. “To the best of my recollection, once as a college stu dent in the ’60s, and then on a few occasions in the ’70s, I used it. “That was the only drug I ever used. I have not used it since. It was a mistake, dnd I regret it.” While many Republicans re sponded cautiously, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said, “You like to think people who are appointed to the Supreme Court re spect the law.” The development plunged the 41- year-old Ginsburg into fresh contro versy that had the potential to derail or at least complicate his confirma tion to the Supreme Court. Reagan’s previous attempt to fill the seat of re tired Justice Lewis Powell Jr. ended in defeat when Ginsburg’s appeals court colleague Robert H. Bork was rejected, 58-42. Ginsburg’s statement came in re sponse to a reporter’s queries on the subject and was issued moments be fore an account of his illegal drug See Ginsburg, page 7 ■ ■ Photo by Sam B. Myers III In review Members of the Corps of Cadets wait to be awarded the Wofford E. Thursday. The award is given to three seniors and three juniors of Cain Award at Fall Review at the Gen. Ormand R. Simpson Drill Field each ROTC branch for outstanding leadership and military aptitude. Legal betting wins big in final tally | 0 I so o a Carlucci to replace retiring Weinberger : WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan on Thursday hailed re- tiring Defense Secretary Caspar W. | Weinberger, the driving force be hind a big military buildup, as a friend who “never let me down” and named national security adviser (Frank Carlucci to succeed him. Completing a major turnover in the national security leadership, Reagan also promoted Army Lt. I Gen. Colin Powell, the No. 2 man on I the National Security Council staff, to succeed Carlucci. Powell had been handpicked by Carlucci as his sec ond in command last January to help rebuild the NSC after its repu- jtation was tarnished by the Iran- Contra affair. Powell is -the highest-ranking black person on the White House staff. After keeping Weinberger’s planned resignation secret for seve- | ral weeks, the president announced the changes at a Rose Garden cere mony attended by Pentagon offi cials, members of the NSC staff, the Cabinet and Congress. News of the turnover leaked out Monday night but had not been officially con firmed. “We are here today to wish Godspeed to an old friend, the finest secretary of defense in the history of our nation,” Reagan said. A seven-year veteran of Reagan’s Cabinet and a friend of two decades, the 70-year-old Weinberger re signed because of concern for the health of his wife, Jane. He said there is no sign of recurrence of the cancer she suffered but that she was ailing from two or three broken ver tebrae in her back. “She has, for a long time, had this great discomfort, and I think that it’s time that I do a bit more to fulfill those obligations,” the secretary told a Pentagon news conference. Weinberger will stay on the job until Carlucci is confirmed by the Senate. No major opposition is ex pected, and Sen. John Warner, R- Va., ranking Republican on the Sen ate Armed Services Committee, said he thought “the Senate will confirm Mr. Carlucci very shortly.” DALLAS (AP) — Fifty of 56 coun ties voted to allow pari-mutuel bet ting locally, and three of those “yes” counties also included greyhound racing on the ticket, state officials said Thursday. Final results from Tuesday’s elec tion as compiled by the Secretary of State’s office show the strongest sup port for the measure came from ur ban counties. Both local and statewide approval was needed before the legalized gambling at the race track was to be allowed in any county. The statewide referendum passed with a 57 per cent to 43 percent margin. Only six rural counties voted down the proposal for local track betting — Grayson, Lipscomb, Na cogdoches, Shelby, Swisher and Van Zandt. “We’re largely an older county,” said Swisher County Clerk Pat Wes ley, explaining the 935-639 failure of the option in the Panhandle county. “The only reason the com missioners put it on the ballot, I think, was so everyone could decide the whole gambling issue at once.” Because pari-mutuel passed at the state level and local voters approved the option, large race tracks may be established near Houston, San Anto nio, and Dallas-Fort Worth, where the measure won overwhelming ap proval. Clements: Betting is no economic cure-all AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Bill Clem ents, who voted for pari-mutuel gambling, said Thursday that Tex ans should not bet on horse and dog racing as a cure-all for the state’s economic woes. The governor, in his first public comments since the Tuesday elec tion that legalized pari-mutuel gam bling, also said he would appoint Texas Racing Commission members “in due course.” Selection of the commission is the next step toward the first races. “I think it will mean jobs and it will mean capital investment for the state of Texas, and certainly our economy needs that kind of help right now,” Clements said. “It probably will not do all the wonderful things some of the people think it will do,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to be any answer in itself, but it will certainly help. “I also know there were a lot of eople who voted against it. They’ll e disappointed. But I think we in Texas have to keep moving forward and making the decisions that we have to do on a time and circum stance basis.” Clements said he was pleased and surprised that almost 30 percent of registered voters cast ballots Tues day on the 25 proposed constitu tional amendments, the pari-mutuel issue and a question concerning how the State Board of Education is se lected. “Not only are they interested and will they turn out, but they are dis criminating,” he said. “They ob viously knew what they wanted to vote for and they knew what the wanted to vote against.” Clements was among state leaders who campaigned in favor of a suc cessful proposal to issue state bonds to help the state lure the supercon ducting super collider, a federal re search project that 24 states are seek ing. “I think that we’re well on our way to going right down to the wire with that situation and I’d say that right now we probably have a 50-50 chance,” the governor said. Smaller race tracks in counties which approved the local option also may have pari-mutuel betting, but will likely have shorter racing sea sons. With 100 percent of the vote counted, Bexar County, which in cludes San Antonio, and Travis County, where Austin is located, supported horse racing by more than a 2-to-l margin. The local option proposition car ried by 1,188 votes in Parker County, west of Fort Worth, but an erroneous report by county officials made it appear it was headed for de feat. Parker County officials were an nouncing both to the media and the Secretary of State’s office the votes on a jail bond election as the votes for local option. They didn’t dis cover their mistake until Wednes day. Many counties, including Par ker, that decided the local-option question already had horse tracks without legalized gambling. Cameron County gave the nod to both greyhound and horse betting. Greyhound betting also was ap proved by voters in two other coastal counties, Galveston and Nueces. Border is where nations overlap, not touch, educator tells crowd By Cindy Milton Staff Writer The boundary between the United States and Mexico is noth ing but a line on the map that sep arates the “Nortens from the Southerners,” the chancellor of the University of Missouri told an audience at Texas A&M Thurs day night. “The border is not where the two nations touch,” Dr. Haskell Monroe said. “It is where they overlap. The influences extend into both the United States and Mexico.” Monroe, a former A&M pro fessor, said there are more simila rities between the two countries than most Americans and Mexi cans will admit to. He said his tenure as president of the University of Texas at El Paso, where his office was closer to the Mexican border than “we are now to Highway 6,” showed him how closely Americans and Mexicans relate. The countries share mutual in terests in agricultural and min eral discoveries and technology, Monroe said. He said the Mexi can economy received a big boost after the free-trade zone modern ized in 1933, allowing more trade access to Mexico, and when “ma quiladoras” — the twin plants that put large numbers of people to work in manufacturing jobs —be gan in 1965. He said an intricate set of eco nomic factors led to a growth of maquiladoras, which increased the Mexican employment rate about 30 percent within 20 years. But the greatest hope for Mex ico and the United States, he said later, is oil: “Every day (that) there is a problem in the Persian Gulf, the more important Mexi can oil is to the United States.” He said tourism between the countries is also an important fac tor in both economies, especially because it allows better interac tion and understanding. He said an understanding between the countries will build the possibili ties of mutual benefits. But Dr. Luis Alfonso Berrue- cos, an anthropologist with the Mexican Ministry of Education, said he is amazed at the lack of knowledge between the cultures, especially considering they share the same continent. He spoke for more than an hour and a half about Mexico’s history and the in fluences of other races on both Mexicans and Americans. He said education is important, and there is a merging of cultures going on, especially in states such as Texas, New Mexico, California and Arizona. That merging, Berruecos said, means that “many people in the United States will have to learn to speak Spanish or they will be come foreigners in their own country.” tS,:: . '' .. (gg§i c WBgMfM '-i*. Photo by Jay Janner Daniel Fallon, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, speaks at the Mexico-U.S. conference Thursday night. Dr. Daniel Fallon, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and ad viser for the Mexican Students’ Association, told the crowd of nearly 200 that when he agreed to be an adviser for an association project last year, he was some what worried about the “inspira tional adventure” the organiza tion had planned. The project Fallon was talking about was the association’s ambi tion to gather prominent Mexi can and American intellectuals at Texas A&M to discuss the na tions’ past and current relations. Thursday evening’s presenta tion, “Mexico-USA: Past, Present and Future,” was part of a three- day conference of Mexican and American students and speakers that reaches the association’s goal. Fallon spoke in place of A&M President Frank E. Vandiver, who was unable to attend because of a schedule conflict. A&M enrollment posts largest gain of U.S. universities From Staff and Wire Reports Texas A&M led the nation’s larg est colleges in enrollment gains this fall, according to a survey released Thursday by the Associated Press. Texas A&M’s gain of 2,531 stu dents for a record enrollment of 39,079 was the largest increase among the institutions that tradi tionally lead the nation in student body size, a telephone survey con ducted by Texas A&M’s Office of Public Information says. The poll showed Texas A&M ad vanced from 10th last year to eighth among the nation’s largest single campus universities. Dr. Jerry Gaston, associate pro vost for academic affairs, said ad ministrators had predicted the large increase but had no idea it would be the largest in the country. “We knew we were going to have a large increase — we had predicted 2,500,” he said. “We had no way of knowing how we compared with other schools because we have no idea what they are doing.” The large projected increase prompted A&M to develop mea sures to control enrollment, he said. “From the expected 2,500 enroll ment increase, we became con cerned about managing future en rollment increases,” Gaston said. “We took steps to control our growth.” The A&M Board of Regents voted Sept. 21 to cap freshman en rollment at 6,600 for the Fall 1988 semester. The University of Texas at Austin compiled the nation’s second-largest increase, gaining 1,603 students for a total of 47,743 — ranking its total second nationally, up one place. Texas is the only state with two universities in the top 10, the survey showed. Of the eight other institutions that are among the 10 largest in the na tion, five reported lower enroll ments this year, including Ohio State University, which has the largest stu dent body. Ohio State reported a 1987 fall enrollment of 53,115, down 765 from last year. Other universities among the 10 largest are Rutgers, which slipped to third with a drop of 820 students to 47,719; University of Minnesota- Twin Cities, 44,293, down 713; and University of Wisconsin-Madison, 43,368, down 1,216. Also, Arizona State, 42,953, up 1,405; Michigan State, 42,096, up 199; University of Maryland-College Park, 38,058, down 581; and Penn State, 36,175, up 1,010. Prairie View A&M, a Texas A&M University System institution with an enrollment of predominantly black students, registered a student gain of 17.8 percent this fall for a total enrollment of 5,301. That was the largest percentage increase in Texas.