The ballot that voters will confront will ask first whether to recall Mr. Davis and then to choose among 135 replacements.
A ballot just sent out to members of the association asks them whether they would agree to a moratorium on the direct grants while the association seeks new Federal research programs.
The ballot asked voters about utility regulation.
The ballots asked partners to provide their names and Social Security numbers.
The fourth ballot would ask voters whether they wanted to hold a National Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution.
The ballot asks voters whether the republic should declare independence, with an option to rejoin a looser Yugoslav alliance of sovereign states.
Unlike in California, where voters were asked if they wanted to ban "preferential treatment," Houston's ballot asked if voters wanted to ban affirmative action.
The fourth ballot, which would be in addition to the usual ones for presidential, congressional and local elections, would ask voters whether they wanted to hold a National Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution.
Its chairman, Frank J. Macchiarola, has said the commission will place a question on the ballot in November asking voters if they want to switch to nonpartisan elections.
Instead, Kommersant reported, the ballot asked voters whether or not they supported a start to negotiations with Georgia on the creation of a federal state.