Vol. 87 No. 165 CJSPS 045360 6 Pages College Station, Texas Friday, June 24, 1988 ' A .P), - H| yjs insdi cesthan ers only °n effort! () ni bavin? 'men say ultl drive business Officials meet, liscuss heat, Jrought plans From Associated Press >n the riricL this JGovernors from 10 parched states Golan saic'B^ an em ergency meeting Thurs of adult e to plot stejjs to help farmers sur- ies he opci.M' e ^ worst drought in 50 years, i, righ, s ^ wbile i° restr y officials said the hot ly ground was increasing the dan- ■rof fires. ■By midafternoon, temperatures provedC ® Da a 8 a ‘ n ^ ie m iddle 90s to it’s reoij Bauttd 100 degrees f rom the central uhan'i High Plains through the lower Mis- ie new sent ion." Public Sent ition-lme st sotiri Valley into the Tennessee Val- iscnption orn lines jJ ... .... 'i n jleyand mid-Atlantic states. ®The devastating combination of l ■tieme heat and record low rainfall nteiaMbvM 0 con, inued to stall barge traffic rwillbeaB 1 ^ nat ‘ on s midsection and in- I i. TMeased the threat of forest fires. . 0 “»e weather eased in parts of the Northeast, however. * r .Mb'St. Louis, the medical examin- iM 8 °^ lce sa '^ Thursday that a 99- War-old woman whose body w&s .. r foi id in a sweltering bedroom the 'ties, lnaili Mevious day had died from the m sTB 31, ^ ut a wor ^ er w h° collapsed n Wd died Wednesday at an un-air- , Bnditioned Chrysler Corp. plant in P 0nt .!?Warbv Fenton, Mo., was found to ". er died of heart disease unrelated the t h e weather, officials said Thurs- 'g" a co ' da. ose signiniMj' ^ e worker’s death had pt co ntideni» om p te( j ot | iers at t i le pl an t to walk Bf the job for a time, but work re- Bijmed Thursday, Chrysler said, ■orkers had also walked out briefly ■ Tuesday. ■Temperature records were bro- ■n or tied in several cities, includ ing, Kansas City, Mo., where the 99- ■gree reading beat the 15-year-old ■cord by 7 degrees. The 98 degrees ■ Washington, D.C., tied a record ^ithad stood for 114 years. In Chicago, Agriculture Secretary chard Lyng told midwestern gov- ors that the federal government !§• LS. ce ins would “do what is needed” to aid farmers. Governors discussed steps to aid their struggling economies, from the diversion of water from Lake Michi gan to speed up the flow of barge traffic on the Mississippi to long term measures to halt the drop in water tables in the northern and western states. In a speech to the governors, Lyng announced a drought hot line for farmers and noted that existing crop insurance and disaster loan programs were available as farmers determine the extent of crop losses in the coming days and weeks. “The situation is still fluid. . . . We’ll need a little bit of time to learn what the losses ai;e,” he said. “But we will do what is needed to minimize the severity of the damage.” Opening the conference, Illinois Gov. James Thompson said that un less his state gets rain in the next 30 days, “we risk the loss of our corn crop and (soybean) crop. And all the governors here can tell much the same story.” Because barge traffic along the Mississippi River is so crucial to agri culture, Thompson proposed that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers seek permission to divert water from Lake Michigan to solve the problem. That proposal, however, drew the fire of Gov. Tommy Thompson from neighboring Wisconsin, who said, “It might turn out to be more disastrous over the long term than the immediate salvation it provides.” Some 1,000 barges were halted along the Mississippi in Memphis, Tenn., area alone, and dredging of the channel continued Thursday. Dry weather also raised the spectre of forest fires. Kick it out The hot Texas weather doesn’t seem to affect the enthusiasm of mem bers of the Denton Fillies as they practice a routine on the Quad Thursday afternoon. The Fillies are camp for high school drill teams. Photo by Sam B. Myers at A&M as part of a summer Sales tax revenue improves outlook By Janet Goode Senior Staff Writer Increases in sales tax revenue throughout Texas cities indicate eco nomic recovery and are relieving fears of a national recession or sharp drop in oil prices, sources in the state comptroller’s office said Wednesday. Candi Manges, spokesman for the comptroller, said the sales tax reve nue gain was sparked by an increase in consumer spending and general economic recovery led by manufac turing. Texas’ ecnomonic outlook should continue to improve with sales tax revenues increasing statewide through 1991 at a rate of more than 8 percent a year, Manges said. City allocation checks this month showed a 23.5 percent increase over June 1987, which can be attributed to the broadened sales tax base along with increase in retail sales. Manges said. Sales tax revenue increases also were evident for the cities of Bryan and College Station. According to a report by the comptroller’s office, College Station’s sales tax revenue for June 1988, compared to June 1987, increased 26.25 percent. According to the report, net pay ment this period for Bryan was $194,958 comparable to payment the prior calandar year of $170,954 — an increase of 14.55 percent. Col lege Station showed an increase from $180,951 to $228,446. Glenn Schroeder, deputy director of finance and budget for College Station, said the sales tax revenue, which goes into the general fund budget for the city’s general opera tions, is slightly higher for the month than had been anticipated. “The entire increase is based on two things,” Schoroeder said, “the economy is doing a little better and retail sales are increasing. “It’s one of those balancing fac tors. This will compensate for other short falls in revenue. Consequently, we will be able to operate on the same level as we have been in the past.” Scott McGough, director of finan cial services in Bryan, said that al though these figures are encourag ing, it is hard to determine a trend from one month. One reason is that checks received quarterly from the state are relativley larger. McGough said the report is also in calendar years rather than fiscal. McGough said that looking at a nine month period of the fiscal year from October to June, the sales tax gain for Bryan was 3.47 — an in crease over the same time period for last year. The total sales tax revenue for the year for Bryan was $740,653. McGough said this is still good news. “The best thing about it is at least it looks like it has leveled off . . . and perhaps trending upward,” he said. o leads found in search for former A&M student Godwin: Frustration caused resignation 4sit liege *tin 12.87 74.02 56.88 ay By Loyd Brumfield Senior Staff Writer ■Police still have no leads in the dis- appearance of a Texas A&M former student, but her mother says she’s still hopeful something will turn up sck;ii. ■‘Every little sign is encouraging,” iBillie Fowler says. ■Her daughter, 24-year-old Au- drtv Cardenas, a May journalism Bduate, has been missing from her job since Monday. ■Cardenas, from Houston, was Ipartif ipating in a newspaper inter- nslup program for minorities and was working at the Belleville News- Democrat in Belleville, Ill. ■Fowler is in Belleville working with the police department and the mtws-Democrat in an effort to find hei daughter. ■Fowler says the last few days have |begim to wear on her. ■Tm kind of tired,” she says. “A little bit was going on a while ago and it was keeping me occupied.” ■Fowler says she hasn’t learned anything new in the case. ■‘Nothing has happened. The po lio are still questioning people, and wi re getting quite a few calls from people who say they’ve seen her,” site says. ■The police follow up everything and every call.” Word of Cardenas’ disappearance has spread all over the country, Fowler says. “A woman called and said she saw Audrey in Detroit trying to get a flight to Houston,” Fowler says. “The only thing that makes me doubt that is that she said the girl was speaking Spanish, and Audrey doesn’t speak Spanish. She may know one or two words, but that’s about it. “You have to follow up every thing. You can’t assume people are wrong in cases like this.” She says St. Louis television sta tions are broadcasting reports and showing Cardenas’ picture regu larly. Fowler, with the help of the News- Democrat, is distributing pictures and posters of her daughter around Belleville, which has a population of about 50,000. “Her picture is all over town,” she says. “Someone called from Houston saying she saw her picture in the (Houston) Chronicle. “People in town have been very helpful. This town is about the size of Bryan. People are very involved with one another here. “It isn’t like Houston, where you’ve got a couple of million peo ple.” It’s been about a month since she’s seen her daughter, Fowler says, al though they had been keeping in touch before Cardenas’ disappear ance. “She called about two weeks ago and said she was settling in and wor king,” she says. “She said she liked her job okay, but they made her do drought sto ries and she didn’t like that. “She’d say, ‘How much can you write about a drought?’ ” One of Cardenas’ professors has described her as a serious-minded student deeply interested in journa lism. Fred Ehrlich, assistant city editor for the News-Democrat, told The Battalion that Cardenas was one of the paper’s best interns. Her name has been entered in a nation-wide computer search for missing people. WASHINGTON (AP) — Caspar Weinberger’s former colleague in private life — brought in to the Pen tagon to get control of procurement — says he quit in frustration last fall because Weinberger and President Reagan failed to support his man agement reforms. “I differ 100 percent with the (former) secretary of defense who said the system is fine but we have a few bad apples,” said Richard P. Godwin, the former undersecretary of defense for acquisition who was brought into the Pentagon to carry out reforms recommended by an other Californian, industrialist Da vid Packard. Godwin, the former president of Bechtel Civil and Minerals Inc., also said Weinberger, the former de fense secretary, was “100 percent wrong” in defending the way the Pentagon buys weapons. In a telephone interview Wednes day, Godwin called the Pentagon procurement process a “national cri sis,” as serious for the United States as drug trafficking and the AIDS ep idemic. “We have institutionalized a bad system,” said 66-year-old Godwin, who worked with Weinberger at Bechtel before President Reagan’s election in 1980. Bechtel Civil and Minerals was a division of Bechtel Group Inc., the huge construction company based in San Francisco. Between assignments in Republican administrations, Weinberger served as vice president and general counsel of the Bechtel Group. Secretary of State George P. Shultz was president of Bechtel Group from 1975-1982. Weinberger said he thinks the Pentagon’s' weapons-buying proce dures are generally adequate, but it is impossible to eliminate dishonesty on the part of some people. Reagan said on Tuesday that al though he does not condone miscon duct, some corruption is “under standable” in an enterprise as big as the defense department, which spends $160 billion a year on acquisi tions and which, Weinberger noted Wednesday, lets more than 50,000 contracts a day. Godwin said he accepted the job as the first undersecretary of de fense for acquisition in 1986 with the understanding that he would stay only as long as he felt he was effec tive. The post was created by Con gress in the wake of a report by Packard’s presidential commission recommending changes in procure ment practices. T exas site part of theft investigation CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — An FBI agent said an investigaton into the theft of 10 turbine heli copter engines from the Corpus Christi Army Depot is part of a federal probe that has recovered $9 million worth of stolen mili tary property in seven states. In addition to the engines sto len from CCAD in 1986, the FBI inquiry involves stolen turbine en gines from Fort Eustis near New port News, Va., and Fort Camp bell in Kentucky. FBI Agent Joe Wolfinger said the investigation involves the largest amount of stolen govern ment property in recent years. The FBI revealed last week that it was investigating the theft of 10 T-55 turbine helicopter en gines stolen from the depot in 1986. CCAD’s stolen engines were seized by federal agents in the last month in Washington, Kentucky and Texas, the FBI said. CCAD, the nation’s largest he licopter repair facility, repairs he licopters from all branches of the military and is Corpus Christi’s largest industrial employer with 3,800 workers. ^A&M student killed in water ski accident By Janet Goode Senior Staff Writer Funeral services for a Texas A&M student who died Monday evening in a water skiing accident in Austin will be Tuesday in Am arillo at St. Thomas Catholic Church. Douglas Swafford, 23, last at tended A&M in Fall 1987, and planned to return as a senior fi nance major in Fall 1988, his mother, Linda Swafford, said. He was living in Austin for the sum mer. Senior Sgt. of Homicide Jim Kortan, of the Austin Police De partment, said the accident took place on Lake Austin when the driver of the boat apparently was distracted for a second when turning the boat around to pick up the skier and accidentally ran over him. Swafford was found Wednes day by Austin Fire Department Divers, Kortan said. The case is now to be pre sented to the district attorney who will determine if charges will be filed against the driver, Dax McCracken, 19, of Austin. Kor tan said McCracken could possi bly be charged with involuntary manslaughter. Kortan also said the accident was alcohol related. Swafford was a member of the Texas A&M chapter of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Linda Swafford said his frater nity brothers want to give Swaf ford a memorial service in Col lege Station. A&M research may help detect cancer By Juliette Rizzo Reporter Texas A&M researchers are testing newly identified chemical substances carried by cancer cells that may provide a more effective way to di agnose deadly tumors in human kidneys. Dr. John Kochevar, assistant professor of pa thology and laboratory medicine at A&M, said doctors find it difficult to treat kidney cancer — renal cell carcinoma (RCC) — because the disease is often diagnosed in the “late stage”, too late for effective treatment. “These tumors are notably resistant to chemo therapy and radiation treatment unless they are spotted early,” Kochevar said. “If the tumors are caught early, treatment through surgery can be effective.” In the medical science laboratories at Texas A&M, Kochevar has identified a chemical known as an RCC antigen carried by cancer cells in the kidney. He said antigens associated with foreign orga nisms usually trigger the body’s first stages of de fense against disease and infection after the orga nisms are detected by antibodies produced by the immune system. “The tumors develop unnoticed and go un treated, because the immune system’s natural an tibodies only weakly react the antigens in kidney cancer,” Kochevar said. “If the tumors are removed or destroyed early enough, a five-year survival rate of 90 percent or greater is given,” Kochevar said. “But, if you have metastasis, spreading of the cancer cells away from the initial tumor, the five-year survi val rate is 10 percent or less.” Because of Kochevar’s discovery of the RCC antigen, an artificial antibody known as a mono clonal antibody has been produced to detect and fight the cells carrying the antigen. Monoclonal antibodies are laboratory-pro duced substances that, by attaching to the RCC antigens, attack the tumor cells like antibodies produced naturally by the immune system. Kochevar’s research is aimed at develpoing the monoclonal antibodies to signal the presence of disease. He says the ability of the monoclonal antibody to attach to antigens present in the blood and ex crete themselves in urine can be a significant tool in diagnosing the tumors early enough for treat ment. He expects that someday the monoclonal anti body might be used to improve the effectiveness of treatments for other tumors in the breast, lung and prostate glands. A test that detects this molecule might some day be included in laboratory studies conducted as part of regular physical examinations, Koche var said. He said research has been encouraging but the antigen is still being tested. “Since RCC is a tumor for which there is no treatment unless the disease is detected early, anything will be helpful to the patient who des perately needs treatment, but like lung cancer, you might be able to kill 90 percent of the cancer ous cells but they might just grow back,” Koche var said. Select patients are being experimentally tested at cancer treatment centers at the Veterans Ad ministration Hospital in Washington D.C. and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Hospital in New York City. Kochevar pointed out that routine clinical use of these tests is still in the future.