19' L Texas A & M University Today Tomorrow See extended forecast page 2. IC . olume 103 • Issue 171 • 6 Pages College Station, TX Millie {, July 28, 1997 '5 Jews Briefs fni WHmmmmm irly voting begins >r state election lid e; uh; •ego: Iptrt I Early voting for the Aug. 9 state ction will last through Aug. 5. Texans will vote on a proposed endment to the state constitution t would increase the residence j^jjjnestead exemption from school dis- ttaxes from $5,000 to $15,000 of home’s market value. The amendment would also allow Texas Legislature to approve a isfer of all or part of the tax freeze the residence homestead of a per- older than 65 years of age. k Early voting polling places are: - Brazos County Courthouse at OE. 26th Street, Bryan -Arena Hall at Tabor Road and Bypass, Bryan Galilee Baptist Church at 804 rth Logan, Bryan MSC at Texas A&M University - College Station Independent jjlhool District Building at 1812 , College Station I lallo* Meg at to Icard Islam: l/orkers accept CM .ontract to end strike 1)5 mi jay I MADISON HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP) iksfc lited Auto Workers approved a deal lintaifnday to end a six-day strike at a neral Motors parts plant that reed four assembly plant shut- iwns and threatened GM’s entire lit)-oi irthAmerican production. About 2,800 union employees fit on strike Tuesday at the GM Icharlwertrain Group plant in Warren, ^nm lich makes front-drive transmis- ons,wheels and suspension parts manyGM cars and trucks. Two days after a tentative contract fereement was reached, the pact was f ippro\iedby 89.4 percent of the 1,082 U workers who voted, the UAW said. Production at the Warren plant 0s to resume Sunday night. boding continues i Germany, Poland FRANKFURT AN DER ODER, Ger- any(AP) — Floodwaters that broke raugh a dike and submerged vil- |es last week poured back into the follen Oder River on Sunday, raising ?i tels downstream to record highs id forcing evacuations. Officials ordered the 17,000 people the Polish border city of Slubice — tacross the water from Frankfurt an tflrOder — to evacuate again for fear riv r would break through the dike. To the north, about 15,000 people iff the German side were told to be sdyto leave at a moment’s notice, indreds of sandbaggers worked fu- wslyto prevent a new tear in the akening dike from worsening. The north-flowing Oder, which forms latural border between Poland and fmany, started flooding about three eks ago after heavy rains in Poland •>i dthe Czech Republic. Pol? I I di ie first German since 1903 ins the famous cycling ice, the Tour de France. See Page 3. ie l[V- SPORTS OPINION smons: Bill Cosby, other 0 merican role models seem fade from the public eye. See Page 5. >sei ONLINE >1 Av •VV lt tp://bat-web.tamu.edu sit The tl ^e, AP’s aii 4-hour iline news :, J rvice. Regents OK budget, new scholarships By Jenara Kocks The Battalion Texas A&M Board of Regents approved a $1.5 billion budget for the 1998 fiscal year and authorized $2.5 million for need-based scholarships for Texas A&M University Sys tem students Friday. The budget is 10.6 percent higher than the 1997 fiscal year budget. The regents also allocated over $675 mil lion of the System's funds for the University, including Texas A&M at Galveston and the Texas A&M Health Science Center. Earlier this year, the Texas Legislature allo cated $2.5 million to the A&M System for need-based scholarships. Texas A&M stu dents who qualify will be eligible for $867,298 of these funds. Don Engelage, executive director of stu dent financial aid, said the new scholarships will be very helpful to some A&M students. “We’re very happy,” Engelage said. “We have more kids that need financial aid than we have scholarships and grants.” Engelage said the scholarships will help students who have financial need and were not able to get grants and scholarships before. According to a press release, each uni versity’s president will make guidelines to award the scholarships beginning in the Fall 1997 semester. The regents approved a bid by Acklam Construction Company Inc. of College Sta tion for the new tennis complex, which will replace the tennis courts near Kyle Field. Marine geologist Dr. David B. Prior was approved by the Board as the new dean of A&M’s College of Geosciences and Mar itime Studies. Prior is Texas A&M’s deputy dean of geo sciences and maritime studies, and he will re place Dr. Robert A. Duce, dean since 1991, starting Aug. 1. Prior said he was looking forward to acting as the College of Geosciences and Maritime Studies’s dean. “I’m very excited and honored to be giv en this appointment,” Prior said in a press release. “The college has many strengths, in cluding the most interesting collection of different disciplines and research and edu cational activities of any geoscience organi zation in the country. It’s a pleasure to join that in a service role.” The regents also authorized A&M offi cials to revise admission requirements for Fall 1998 and to hold public meetings to dis cuss tuition increases. The new admissions requirements give automatic admission to high school stu dents who graduate in the top 10 percent of their high school classes, in accor dance with House Bill 588 passed by the 75th Legislature. A public hearing will be held from 9 to 10:30 a.m. on Aug. 1 in MSC Rm. 292 to an nounce a previously approved increase in the University Authorized Tuition, formerly known as the General Use Fee. Dr. William B. Krumm, vice president for finance and controller, will preside over the hearing. Budget bargainers near tax credit compromise Clinton wants proposed cuts to help lower-paid families WASHINGTON (AP) — With bargainers at the brink of a budget pact, Republican leaders and others said Sunday they were near com promise over who would qualify for the pro posed $500-per-child tax credit, one of their thorniest and highest-profile standoffs. Details were still being finalized, said par ticipants who spoke on condition of anonymity. But the emerging solution was aimed at satisfying President Clinton’s de mand that the credit help lower-paid families who owe little or no in come tax, plus Republi cans’ insistence that it ap ply to families earning more than $60,000, where Clinton wanted to begin phasing it out. That possible compro mise was just one detail of the still-evolving package discussed by eight con gressional leaders and White House officials who blitzed the Sunday television news shows. Negotiations were ready to resume Sunday evening, and some participants speculated that a deal might be announced as early as Monday. They also pointed toward a likely cigarette tax increase, a victory for Clinton and many sena tors of both parties. And while Republicans will win a cut in the capital gains tax rate, a GOP leader conceded they might have to jettison the House-approved plan to exempt property val ues due to inflation from that levy — which has drawn an explicit White House veto threat. Appearing on ABC’s “This Week,” House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, said the Clinton two sides were nearing agreement on the chil dren’s tax credit and “trying to fit the president’s details into our principles and it’s a very diffi cult fit to be made but I think we can get there.” And Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R- Miss., said Republicans were for the first time considering applying the credit to people who only owe the payroll tax. “But they’ve got to be willing to help us, too,” he added on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Aides who spoke on condition of anonymi ty verified that an agreement on the children’s credit was evolving but provided little detail. Exactly who should receive the credit has been one of the fiercest disputes in the long- running negotiations. Clinton has cast Repub licans as favoring the rich over low-income people, and the GOP has accused the president of thirsting to expand welfare. Clinton wants the $500 credit to apply to families earning as little as $18,000 annually who owe no income tax but still owe the pay roll tax deducted for Social Security and Medicare. He would phase it out for families making $60,000 to $75,000 through 2000. Af ter that, the phase-out range would be $80,000 to $100,000. Republicans would deny the credit to low- paid people who earn no income tax, but save it for their use if they owe tax over the follow ing three years. They also would begin phasing it out at a higher, $75,000 level. First, however, they have to finish negotia tions. Republicans want a speedy deal so they can get bills cutting taxes and extracting sav ings from Medicare, Medicaid and other pro grams to Clinton by Friday, the scheduled start of Congress’ August break. Western powers rely on Asian nations to police Cambodia KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Call it deferential diplomacy. In seeking a political settlement of the gov ernment mess in Cambodia, the United States and other Western nations are deferring to Southeast Asians to find it. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright con fronted Burma on human rights Sunday but noted it is the job of the Association of South east Asian Nations to get that country’s military rulers to change their ways. Welcome to Southeast Asia, where the Unit ed States, Russia, the European Union and oth ers are outsiders looking in, trying to influence change without leaving themselves open to charges of interference. At stake is security in all of East Asia, where the United States has fought three wars this century. “We need to be true to our principles in de scribing how we believe various societies should operate for the benefit of their people,” said Albright, in Malaysia to attend the ASEAN Regional Forum. “But there are different ways of making those points in terms of tone and how one addresses people. “I believe that the best role for the United States is as a partner and as somebody who respects the operating procedures of various countries.” An often-confrontational Albright chooses reason in dealing with ASEAN, an economic bloc that is gradually becoming a regional po litical arbitrator. Deferring to her conference host, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, Albright is even asking permission to hold a news con ference — with or without him — on her way out of town Tuesday. “You have to be good guests. You can’t always be the elephant that tramples on the grass,” her spokesman, Nicholas Burns, explained. America is not the only elephant-sized na tion stepping carefully. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, for example, complained, “The process of change in Myanmar (Burma) has been moving at a pace similar to that of glue moving uphill.” But asked whether Southeast Asian nations hurt the campaign by accepting Burma into ASEAN this year, Downer de murred: “It was an ASEAN decision.” Tom Carothers, a democracy expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the rising economic power of Southeast Asian’s 450 million people means they can take care of their own more than ever. “Of all the regions of the world, Asia is least ^ ^ ... the best role for the United States is as a partner and as somebody who respects the operating procedures of various countries.” Madeline Albright Secretary of State susceptible to a sort of Western acceptance with an international community telling it what to do,” Carothers said. “These are ancient civilizations, with long traditions of their own. They’re developing, and they’re solving their own problems.” Richard Fisher, a policy analyst with the conservative Heritage Foundation, said all that Southeast Asia wants from the West is capital and security guarantees. One of the region’s largest investors, the United States has 100,000 troops setting a shield for Asia, thousands aboard Japan-based ships. “The thing they don’t want is lectures from us,” Fisher said. Flying High Photograph: Tim Moog Alexander Straltsov practices an aerial ballet for Cirque Angenue at the indoor soccer court in the Student Recreation Center. The 27-member troupe employs contortionists, acrobats and vocalists to tell the story of a young, aspiring trapeze artist. See story, Page 6. Priest to face trial for assault charges Altar boy claims he was drugged, sodomized while sleeping SINTON, Texas (AP) — Four days after the Catholic Diocese of Dallas was slammed with a record judgment in a priest molestation case, a trial was set to begin for a South Texas priest charged with sodomizing an altar boy. The Rev. Jesus Garcia, 39, is accused of as saulting the boy in 1992 during an overnight stay at the rectory of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Mathis, a town 30 miles north west of Corpus Christ!. See Related Story, Page 4. The boy, who was 15 at the time, con tends Garcia slipped drugs into a glass of milk, then sodomized him when he was in a sleep state. He says the priest asked him to spend the night because he was scheduled to assist at Mass the following day. “That was the night that killed our fami ly. That was the night he stole our lives from us,” the teen’s mother said in an interview before a gag order was issued against all par ties in the case. The priest maintains his innocence, and the Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi is standing by him. “We follow the great American principle that an individual is innocent until proven guilty,” said Marty Wind, a spokesman for the diocese. “It’s very important that Father Jesus gets his day in court. I’m just sorry it took this long to come to trial.” Jury selection was scheduled to begin Monday morning. The case comes just days after a civil jury ordered the Catholic Diocese of Dal las and a suspended priest to pay $119.6 million to 10 men the priest is accused of molesting and the family of another who committed suicide. The award was the largest ever rendered in a priest molesta tion case, attorneys said. A civil lawsuit also is pending against Garcia by his accuser and three other men who say he assaulted them in a similar man ner. A fifth plaintiff, who is a former deacon and the father of the accuser in the criminal case, contends Garcia fondled him during a 1994 pilgrimage to Jerusalem. A grand jury declined to indict Garcia in connection with the other allegations. The lawsuit also names the Catholic Church, the Corpus Christi Diocese and its former bishop, Rene Gracida, accusing them of conspiring to cover up Garcia’s acts and of attempting to coerce the plaintiffs into keeping quiet. The lawsuit seeks an unspecified amount of damages. Wind said he could not comment on the lawsuit because it is pending litigation.